As has been reported, at least three active Broad-tailed Hummingbird nests are 
known at Grandview Cemetery (Fort Collins, Larimer) this breeding season.  The 
Birds of North America (BNA) account for this species was authored by the 
Calders.  William, now deceased, studied this species for about 20 years at the 
famous Rocky Mountain Biological Station at Gothic, CO.  Much of the account is 
based on his diligent work, along with that of his wife Lorene.  

So far, two of the three nests at Grandview have already produced fledged young 
(2 from each nest per the norm).  At present, the third nest, well behind the 
others, apparently still has eggs being incubated.  Calder shows the earliest 
Broad-tailed Hummingbird eggs being laid around May 20.  Doing the math (eggs 
16-19d, nestlings 21-26d) and calculating back, this puts the egg deposition 
period for the southwestern corner nest (which yielded free-flying young 
somewhere between June 10 and June 14) at April 26th (earliest potential date) 
or May 8th (latest potential date).  The intriguing "tripledecker" nest in the 
southeastern corner yielded young around 18June, putting egg deposition onset 
somewhere between May 4 and May 12.  The slower (more "normal"?) nest in the 
center showed egg deposition (a guess based on how the female acted) at 
somewhere between June 10 and June 15, egg hatching somewhere between June 26 
and July 3 (Calder shows the latest date for the egg stage being about 10July), 
with fledging anticipated sometime between July 17 and July 24.  

Gothic is 9,485 feet ASL.  Fort Collins is right at 5000 feet ASL.  For what 
it's worth, even adjusting for the elevational difference (however one would do 
that), it would seem this spring's egg-deposition for the southwestern and 
southeastern cemetery nests was earlier than Calder found during his long-term 
study.  

Egg hatch for the central nest should be in about a week, which would put it 
about normal, even a bit late, for a mountain nest.  Mama looks real bored and 
has added a narrow rim of lichen, bark, and conifer pitch bits to the nest 
while she waits.  She can't know (can she?), but the cemetery is a lot safer 
place for LIFE at present than the foothills 5-20 miles to the west.

Dave Leatherman
Fort Collins  

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Colorado Birds" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/cobirds?hl=en.

Reply via email to