
Appearance
The Oasis hummingbird is a mid-sized hummingbird with an average length of 13-13.5 cm for an adult male and 11-11.5 cm for an adult female. They have an olive green colored back and grey to white colored breast with a distinctive cinnamon colored rump. They have a long, decurved, black bill. They are sexually dimorphic with males having a brightly iridescent gorget that is blue to red in color and a long forked tail. Females have much shorter tail feathers and no iridescent gorget.Behavior
They live solitary lives as adults and are very territorial. Males do not tolerate other males within their territory, though they seem to be more accepting of males of different species. During the breeding period, the males occupy a home range of about 40x 40 meters. Their diet is understudied at the moment but the morphology of their bill is evidence that they, like most hummingbirds, feed primarily on nectar as a source of energy. They are known to eat small invertebrates as well.
Habitat
The hummingbird can inhabit a variety of niches from desert oases, urban areas, arid scrub lands and dry coastal deserts. They are endemic to south America and restricted to the Pacific coast of Peru and Chile, though evidence suggests they are expanding south. Populations in the northern and southernmost reaches of their range have smaller individuals than in the central regions, the reason for this being currently unknown. There are no known migration patterns and it is thought that they are fairly sedentary, however colonization events at newly emergent oases would indicate that they occasionally venture out to explore new regions.Reproduction
As of now, little is known about the life cycle of the Oasis Hummingbird. Like most hummingbirds, the female is solely responsible for the incubation and rearing of the young while the male leaves immediately after copulation. The incubation period is about 16 days and the nestling period about 27. The average clutch size is 2 eggs and the dimensions of an egg are 13.8x9.2 mm.References:
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