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LunarEclipse
Enlil's Official Story


Registered: 10/31/04
Posts: 21,407
Loc: Building 7
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Hyperactive Hummingbirds
#5906830 - 07/27/06 08:43 PM (17 years, 6 months ago) |
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Another thread convinced me that my hummingbirds are hyperactive.
As a human who is larger and more in control of things than the hummingbirds are, and in accordance with my best interests, I am considering putting Ritalin into their feeders. It has become obvious that the pure white sugar water I feed them has not helped.
I could see them better if they were slowed down anyway. Plus they might stick around in the yard or even lay there. I could make them a little bed to lay in all day.
The best part is that there is probably some research money at Ritalin & Co. who would fund the whole thing.
-------------------- Anxiety is what you make it.
Edited by LunarEclipse (07/27/06 08:47 PM)
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redgreenvines
irregular verb


Registered: 04/08/04
Posts: 37,532
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Re: Hyperactive Hummingbirds [Re: LunarEclipse]
#5907906 - 07/28/06 03:20 AM (17 years, 6 months ago) |
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please send me some my wife has allergies I think it would help her too we are off sugar water altogether
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Seuss
Error: divide byzero


Registered: 04/27/01
Posts: 23,480
Loc: Caribbean
Last seen: 2 months, 20 days
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Re: Hyperactive Hummingbirds [Re: LunarEclipse]
#5908031 - 07/28/06 05:10 AM (17 years, 6 months ago) |
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Hummingbirds hibernate at night...
-------------------- Just another spore in the wind.
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redgreenvines
irregular verb


Registered: 04/08/04
Posts: 37,532
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Re: Hyperactive Hummingbirds [Re: Seuss]
#5908055 - 07/28/06 05:27 AM (17 years, 6 months ago) |
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I find they sound like star wars light sabers when they fly around.
one morning in nova scotia, I had some salvia in the sunroom of a friend's cottage, and "whoonnnngnnn whoooonnngnngn" I wondered "where is Obi Wan? - there is a disturbance in the force...",
but when I opened my eyes a green and red hummer was staring at me, just hovering. soon it needed more fuel and "whoonnnngnnn whoooonnngnngn" away it went.
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capliberty
Stranger


Registered: 04/23/06
Posts: 1,949
Last seen: 14 years, 5 months
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I wish I was a hummingbird,
thoughs animals sound dope
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LunarEclipse
Enlil's Official Story


Registered: 10/31/04
Posts: 21,407
Loc: Building 7
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Re: Hyperactive Hummingbirds [Re: Seuss]
#5908325 - 07/28/06 08:37 AM (17 years, 6 months ago) |
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Quote:
Poster: Seuss Subject: Re: Hyperactive Hummingbirds
Hummingbirds hibernate at night...
Actually, hummingbirds and bats become "torpid" every night whereas hibernation is the dormant state of many weeks. With the exception of some of the goatsuckers, no birds are known to hibernate.
Google search reveals... Hibernation is when an animal spends many weeks in a dormant state in a small, protected area. As it sleeps, the animal uses very little energy. As a result, it does not need to eat to obtain more energy. If it has eaten enough food during the year and stored energy in the form of body fat, the animal will sleep until spring without eating anything. One secret to being able to do this is that the animal succeeds in lowering its body temperature.
Many small mammals hibernate over the winter months because they cannot find enough food to give them the energy they need to keep warm. Such animals rely on vegetation or insects for food. Since the populations of these food sources diminish in the winter months, the animals which eat them would die of hunger if they did not hibernate.
The Chipmunk - a Small Mammal Which Hibernates hipmunks, also called ground squirrels, normally have a body temperature of 37°C. They dig underground tunnels and in one of these tunnels they build a nest where they will pass the winter months. In this tunnel, a chipmunk is protected from its enemies and benefits from a constant temperature above freezing. In order to survive this long period of sleep without food, a chipmunk eats enough during the summer months to double its body mass.
Several factors may start an animal thinking about hibernating for the winter.
The environmental temperature drops, The days become shorter and the nights become longer, Food becomes less plentiful. The animal's biological clock (a natural instinct the animal has to begin hibernation) triggers the start of changes in its behavior. The chipmunk settles down in its nest of grasses and leaves and curls up into a ball with its fur fluffed up. The following body changes occur:
Its heart beat drops from 350 to 4 beats per minute. Its body temperature drops from 37°C to 3 °C. All its body's processes slow down. That way its body food stores are enough to allow it to survive the winter. If the animal were active it would soon burn of its body food stores and with the lack of food outside it would quickly die. At the end of winter the chipmunk weighs only 160 grams. It was 300 grams before hibernation. During the six months of its hibernation it wakes up every fifteen days to urinate. Hibernation is not always a successful way of passing winter. It has been estimated that two-thirds of the ground squirrels in North America die during hibernation. They die because their body runs out of food reserves or because a predator such as a fox finds them while they are asleep. This is why an animal which is hibernating should never be disturbed. If it wakes up it will lose valuable energy reserves.
Hibernating mammals carefully control their body temperature. Their body temperature does not fall to the point of freezing, though, as this would kill the animal. The breathing rate and the heart rate slow down too.
The brown bear that sleeps during the winter is not really a hibernating animal. Its body temperature only falls a few degrees and its pulse rate and breathing rate remain the same. Squirrels do not hibernate either; they sleep in nests in trees. They will come out from time to time to search for food. Squirrels are well known for hiding away food in the autumn, which they will find and eat in winter. When the squirrel is looking for its hidden store of food it searches by smell rather than remembering where it hid the food.
Bats hibernate throughout winter when their body temperature drops to about 4°C. However, bats and hummingbirds are animals which become torpid every day. When bats are awake and hunting for food their body temperature is about 40°C. When they return home to roost in a cave or under a roof, their body temperature drops to the temperature of the air. Bats hunt at dawn and dusk so every day they have two sleep periods and two hunting periods. Hummingbirds are active, feeding on nectar, during the day and they become torpid at night. This saves them a lot of energy. When they are flying, hummingbirds may consume 180 cm3 of oxygen per hour but at night they only consume about 6 cm3 of oxygen per hour.
-------------------- Anxiety is what you make it.
Edited by LunarEclipse (07/28/06 08:44 AM)
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