The Glitter in the Green : In Search of Hummingbirds

by Jon Dunn

2021

Publication

Bloomsbury Publishing, c2021.

Library's rating

Status

Available

Description

"Hummingbirds are a glittering, sparkling collective of over three hundred wildly variable, colorful species. For centuries they have captured our imaginations - revered by indigenous Americans, coveted by European collectors, and to this day admired worldwide for their unsurpassed metallic, jewel-like plumage, acrobatic flight, and immense character. Yet they exist on a knife-edge -- theirs is a precarious life, dependent upon finding sufficient nectar to provide the high energy their bodies demand daily. They live fast and die young. And they do this in habitats that range from boreal woodlands to deserts, from dripping cloud-forests to montane paramo, and on islands both tropical and sub-polar. They are, perhaps, the ultimate embodiment of evolution's power to carve a niche for a seemingly delicate creature in even the harshest of places. The Glitter in the Green tells the colorful story of these fabulous birds -- their history, their compelling life cycles, and their perilous position in a changing landscape -- and the stories of the people, past and present, whose lives have been shaped by the zealous passion hummingbirds inspire. Enthusiastic amateur birdwatchers, conservation workers, scientists, smugglers, witches, and celebrities -- all have been consumed in one way or another with passion for the most remarkable family of all the birds. Travelling the full length of their worldwide range, from the very edge of the Arctic Circle to the sub-Antarctic islands off the tip of South America, acclaimed nature writer Jon Dunn embarks on a search for the most remarkable examples of their kind, exploring their rich cultural heritage, and encountering a host of human characters as colorful as the birds themselves"--… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member DavidWineberg
Obsessions can make for fascinating books. In Jon Dunn’s The Glitter in the Green, his obsession with hummingbirds takes him from his native and hummingbirdless Shetland Islands to the Americas, where literally thousands of hummingbird species are hanging on. It is a great trip, with history,
Show More
folk tales and biology percolating throughout. There’s even the occasional dash of danger. But not from the hummingbirds.

Hummingbirds are a western hemisphere phenomenon. They live from the farthest reaches of Alaska to the tip of South America at Tierra del Fuego, up mountains and down at sea level, and Dunn booked himself a top to bottom trip to see the rarest of the rare, and if possible, photograph them.

This is far better than what his predecessor obsessives used to do, which was kill them, stuff them and collect their dead bodies in their homes. Hummingbirds have been a horrifically big industry. Hundreds of thousands of tiny hummingbird bodies have gone into women’s hats, for example, and they are still sold as pendants and amulets promising health and happiness to wearers. It got to the point where fraudsters made up their own species. They pieced together feathers and skins from different birds, and sold them as new or (extremely) rare species. Some of the best museums in the world fell for it.

If destroying their habitats weren’t enough, poisoning them with neonicotinoid pesticides and children shooting them with slingshots have made it a miracle they’re around at all. Cats, a billion strong around the world, love to snatch the life from them, because they are too tame and trusting. Rats invade their tiny nests. Agriculture reduces their living space. But plumage hunters have nearly done them in. A hundred fifty years ago, Lord Strathmore noted: “The activities of the plumage hunters have cut the number of species of hummingbird species in Trinidad from nineteen to five,” for example.

It is actually fortunate that so many people are obsessed with hummingbirds, because they set up feeders for them all up and down the continents. While some bemoan the new dependency on feeders instead of (or in addition to) harder foraging, it might be the case that manmade feeders have become completely critical to their migrations and survival.

Hummingbirds migrate. This is something Man has only recently discovered, by tagging a leg and examining the same bird up to 3500 miles elsewhere. From Alaska to Florida, in this case. They can still do it because feeders along the way are charging stations. The dearth of natural flora, tied to the steep decline of pollinators as well as industrial takeovers of all useful land, makes their travels iffy without human intervention.

The birds need an astonishing amount of such fuel to thrive. They live in the fast lane. Their wings beat at 50-200 times per second; their hearts pump at 1200 beats per minute. To do this, they burn 4000 calories an hour, spending their lives feeding and resting, feeding and resting. They flick their long tongues at nectar 16 times a second, allowing the snatch and grab feeding that keeps them from being in one exposed place for too long. They don’t slurp so much as snatch. Their tongues are actually two pieces, which they purse into a tube to capture nectar.

Dunn begins at the top of the world, in Alaska, where he sets the pace. Birders are very supportive of each other. They will help if they possibly can. They will go out of their way to aid a birder in search of his or her holy grail. Dunn gets to network and meet all kinds of helpful and supportive people along the way, making each country he visits into a successful foray despite the weather, the climate, the terrain or, as in Bolivia, nationwide turmoil over the federal election where Evo Morales tried to cook the books.

Dunn’s journey, a trip most of us would consider the adventure of a lifetime, took him down from Alaska through the western American states, through Mexico, over to Cuba, back to Costa Rica, Colombia, Ecuador, Bolivia, Peru, Brazil, Chile and Argentina, where he ended up at the tip of South America, to find a rare hummingbird just as it got too cold for the bird to stay much longer. Each country has its own story and marvelous people who help. By then end, readers would be justified in feeling that birders should be running things – everything.

He spends time on Robinson Crusoe Island, a rock of terrible weather, festooned with feral cats, rats, and brambles, all of which are invasive species brought in by residents to improve things. It doesn’t take a genius to predict that the opposite happened, as the cats kill the hummingbirds, the rats eat their eggs and the brambles wreak havoc with the native fauna. Oh-for-three is a typical score when people tamper with nature.

Four rabbits were let loose in Tierra del Fuego in 1936, and at last count, in 1953, there were 30 million. The government brought in beavers(!) to create a fur industry, which never took off, but the beavers, with no natural enemies to control their numbers, have changed the environment completely. The result is reduced habitat for hummingbirds, something Dunn finds all over the hemisphere.

Hummingbirds are represented by so many species, they are all too often limited to a tiny territory with very specific characteristics. They are often simply endemic to a tiny area of a country and nowhere else. Destroy those environmental conditions, and the hummingbirds could vanish. They migrate to another tiny area in order to satisfy the need for energy food when the seasons dictate. We can only hope they come back.

Fortunately, residents and some whole countries (such as Costa Rica) are noticing the value of ecotourism. Birders in particular seem to be wealthier, leisurely, friendly, harmless and passionate. Catering to their needs and whims is proving worthwhile. Setting out a fenceline full of feeders in the right neighborhood sees flocks of birders assembling daily. The word spreads fast among them. Hummingbird-friendly homes become targets of pilgrimages.

The birds range in size from tiny – the size of a bumblebee, to dragonfly size, to “gigantic” – finch size. Some supplement their nectar diet with insects, sucking them out of woodpecker-drilled holes, or catching them in the air like dragonflies do.

For the most part, they come in shockingly brilliant, iridescent colors, often clashingly and obnoxiously so. (This is how they ended up decorating hats and books, among other things.) Some have furry boots, outrageously long tail feathers, and personalities to match. One hummingbird was constantly bullied by a fiercer species, to the point where it complained to the feeders’ owner. It hovered in front of the man’s face until he agreed to go over to a feeder and cup his hands around it so that only the complainer could (finally) feed in peace there. Now of course, the owner is well trained and has to do this all day. He complains he can’t go anywhere any more.

There are placid hummingbirds, and territorial hummingbirds, that will chase all others away and/or fight them to the death. Some have serrated beaks for doing battle. Some will sit on a person’s finger and sip at leisure from a thimbleful of sugar water. Some will even enter the house to be so fed. It is a whole society, with every personality we are familiar with.

Obsessives today collect memories rather than stuffed bodies. Dunn makes a point of remembering every aspect of his many sightings, and relates them in terrific detail. He describes another obsessive, Sandy Komito, who set out to see as many as he could, and logged 725 different species of them in just one year. That’s two different hummingbirds a day, every day, for a year. There is much to see in the world of hummingbirds.

So the book is part travelogue, part nature study, part history and part trivia, a great combination that keeps it moving, not perhaps at hummingbird speed, but with plenty of zigs and zags to keep readers turning the pages.

David Wineberg
Show Less
LibraryThing member BookAnonJeff
Love Letter To Hummingbirds. This is a travel/ bird spotting book following the author's adventures as he seeks to see as many hummingbirds as possible in their natural (ish) settings, from pole to pole. The narrative structure follows the author as he starts in Alaska chasing down a particular
Show More
bird that was reportedly seen there - that had been originally tagged in Tallahassee, Florida. A bird that weighs just a few ounces, making a flight that many of its far larger brethren would never imagine. We continue to follow the hummingbirds into the US, spending a fair amount of time in Arizona and Mexico, and we continue all the way down to Tiego Del Fuego - the bottom of the world (as far as hummingbirds go, where here they share their habitat with penguins!). Part ornithological expedition, part history, part current events commentary, this is a solidly written - if a bit esoteric - book perfect for bird watchers and related enthusiasts. Even as a generic travel book, this still works well as Dunn so completely describes the environs he finds himself in - including an up close and personal encounter with a puma! Very well done, and very much recommended.
Show Less
LibraryThing member brangwinn
For non-birders, this maybe be TMI (too much information), but if you are fascinated by these tiniest of birds, you’ll appreciated Dunn’s look at the hummingbird. Dunn, a natural-history writer, set off to see hummingbirds in the America’s. Starting off in Cordova, Alaska where he looked for
Show More
the rufous hummingbird, he made his way south to tierra del Fuego in search of the green-backed firecrown. As he goes he tells how the “glitter in green” has been threatened because of their beauty. As far back as the Aztecs, their feathers were used in clothing and pictures. And as climate change impacts the birds, he worries about their future.
Show Less
LibraryThing member JulieStielstra
Jon Dunn, British birder, writer, naturalist, and photographer, grew up on the side of the world where there are no hummingbirds – except dead ones in the hummingbird cabinet in London’s Natural History Museum. “Dipped in rainbows,” they mesmerized him and he was well and truly hooked. His
Show More
first sight of a live hummer, in Arizona’s Madera Canyon, was literally magnificent: big, bold, dark, glowing, its wings issuing a “sonorous buzz” – it was a Magnificent (now called a Rivoli’s) hummingbird. And so he plans a journey, from the northernmost tip to the southernmost extreme of hummingbird territory, from Alaska to Tierra del Fuego, to see as many hummers as he can, in all their haunts and habitats, from deserts to glaciers to jungles. And lucky us: we get to go with him.

Dunn is a genial, dedicated (obsessed?), and infinitely knowledgeable guide. He will tell you everything you ever wanted to know about these physiological miracles (a hummer can require 4000 calories an hour to nourish a heart that beats 1200 times a minute, and that climate change is affecting their ranges to the extent that an Anna’s hummingbird has been seen feeding in Alaska in January). He will tell you about the historical naturalists who studied, identified, named, and killed them in vast numbers. There are elaborate images in art museums like the portrait of Christ made entirely of hummingbird feathers; tiny desiccated chuparosas are sold by the packet as love charms in a foul, stinking Mexican wildlife market as bad as anything in Wuhan, China. Darwin, Dickens, Edward Lear (The Owl and the Pussycat man, who was also a fine bird painter), Fidel Castro, Teddy Roosevelt, Gerald Durrell, David Attenborough – all make cameo appearances. If there’s a hummingbird connection, Dunn has found it. There’s even a flight in a rickety plane over the famous Peruvian Nazca glyph of a hummingbird, and speculation about what precise species it may be. The place of hummingbirds in history, folklore, poetry, fashion, art… it’s all here, enthusiastically described and you can’t help but be charmed.

And then, of course, the birds themselves. Dunn has to dig deep to find the words to describe them: emerald, sapphire, ruby, topaz; shimmer, sparkle, blaze, flame, glow. The names alone (largely thanks to John Gould, an otherwise thoroughly unpleasant man) are something out of fairy tales: Fiery Topaz, Velvet Purple Coronet, the particularly ferocious Black Jacobin, Green-Throated Mango, Tourmaline Sunangel, Festive Coquette, Sapphire-vented Puffleg… What this book desperately needs is pictures. Dunn is a fine photographer; I would have hoped some of these creatures would have shown their faces in the pages, but I had to settle for Googling. And I promise you, every image for every one of these wondrous names will make you gasp, smile, and say, “wow!”

Dunn must be an affable fellow, and I assume he must speak good Spanish, for he engages a cast of guides, drivers, lodgekeepers, and locals in his quest who are dedicated and generous. He discusses the protections afforded birds in areas threatened by development (Brazil is a horrifying example) or climate change, and asks (pre-Covid!): “Were the ecotourism to dry up, what would happen to the Marvelous Spatuletail?” What, indeed? Huembo Lodge’s Facebook page says they are open with all “biosecurity protocols” for Covid in place – let us hope for the best.

Not a field guide, not an ornithological treatise. History, adventure travel, quest, obsession, with effusive language to share the wonderment of these tiny, hovering, fierce, glorious birds. One evening, Dunn lingers in a clearing high in the Ecuadorean forest. His fellow birders have returned to the lodge. There is a “deep throbbing hum” in the shadows. A waft of air brushes his cheek, and a dark hummingbird is hovering inches from his face. The bird shifts to face him, and the inky plumage suddenly turns to an “overpowering imperial purple,” and the late light “exploded into myriad sparks… coruscating… glittering.” He and the bird “share some sort of communion,” the bird deliberately looking him in the eye. Dunn’s first Velvet-Purple Coronet, and his desire to share that moment with us makes this book a lovely and endearing pleasure.

Thanks to NetGalley for an advance e-copy in exchange for an honest review.
Show Less
LibraryThing member breic
One of a number of birding books that I've read recently, and not one of the best. The personal part of the story is just not told very well. Too often it is about Dunn visiting in the wrong season, or about time limits based on flight reservations. Perhaps these technical difficulties would have
Show More
fit better in a "big hummingbird year" book, but the story is not arranged around such a narrative, so the time limits just seem intrusive, out of place. Dunn's attitude toward species that are going extinct is also problematic, for me. He's a tourist, here to get his photos—and he doesn't get involved beyond that.

>A quarter of a hummingbird’s bodyweight was accounted for by the pectoral muscles that drove its wings. Those wings could beat between fifty and two hundred times per second, reduced to a mere blur to the human eye. Sustaining such flight required a hummingbird to consume some four thousand calories per hour, powering a heart that beats around twelve hundred times per minute

> H82779, the female Rufous Hummingbird who bore the tiny metal ring on her leg that Florida hummingbird ringer Fred Dietrich placed upon her in Tallahassee on January 13, 2010. Five months later, on June 28, H82779 found herself in the careful hands of Kate in Chenega Bay, Alaska, some 3,500 miles from where human eyes had last set sight of her. By any avian standards, a 3,500-mile migration is an epic undertaking—but for a bird that weighs at best 3.5 grams, less than a penny coin, it’s nothing short of miraculous.

> Defoe certainly met with Rogers, if not Selkirk himself and, in 1719, inspired by Selkirk’s story, he anonymously published The Life and Strange Surprizing Adventures of Robinson Crusoe, a story set in the Caribbean but rooted firmly in Selkirk’s Pacific experiences
Show Less
LibraryThing member PennyMck
Canada is home to such a limited number of hummingbirds, so the variety portrayed in this book is simply stunning - the diversity of colours and sizes, the elaborate headdress on the Rufous-crested Coquette, the fancy "earrings" on the Sparkling Violetear, and the amazing tail on the Marvellous
Show More
Spatuletail have to be seen to be believed. And then there's the beak almost as long as the body on the Sword-billed Hummingbird. These are feisty little birds with a very long history. Dunn delves into the mythology and the commerce surrounding hummingbirds to provide a rounded picture of these birds place in our universe.
Show Less
LibraryThing member JudyGibson
I'm not a birder but of course I love hummingbirds (who doesn't?). I appreciated the author's quest to see these beauties wherever they occur but was saddened by his observations of factors leading to the decline of many species.

He did a nice job of integrating historical and cultural backgrounds
Show More
of the places he traveled, and this was perhaps more interesting to me than the actual bird content.

I intend to number and cross-reference the photo plates. Wish the publisher had done that.
Show Less
LibraryThing member MarthaJeanne
This is not about hummingbirds. It's about making lists of hummingbirds. He sees them but doesn't really watch them. I got about halfway through before giving up.

Language

Original language

English

ISBN

9781526613110
Page: 0.169 seconds