Berylline Hummingbird
Berylline Hummingbird: Medium hummingbird, glittering green back, head, nape, throat, and breast. Wings and tail are rufous. Bill is black; lower mandible has red base. Undertail coverts are cinnamon-brown. Feeds on nectar and insects. Direct and hovering flight with rapid wing beats.
● Song:
"sirr, kirr-I-rr, kirr-I-rr"
● Foraging & Feeding:
Berylline Hummingbird: Feeds on nectar and insects; often dominates other feeding hummingbirds by diving at them and chasing them away from flowers.
● Breeding & nesting:
Berylline Hummingbird: Two white eggs are laid in a nest made of plant fibers and spider webs, covered with lichens, and built in a tree or shrub, 17 to 25 feet above the ground, usually on a horizontal branch or vertical fork. Female incubates eggs for about 14 days.
● Similar species:
Berylline Hummingbird: Buff-bellied Hummingbird has cinnamon-brown to buff belly, shows no rufous on wings, and has a black tip on lower mandible.