As the Earth’s climate warms, some animals may seek a reprieve from the heat in colder, northern climates or higher altitudes. For some species, these cooler locales may provide greener—so to speak—pastures than their current homes as annual average temperatures continue to increase.
For the diminutive Anna’s hummingbird—which calls North America’s West Coast from California to Vancouver, British Columbia, home—this might not be an option. According to research published Thursday in the Journal of Experimental Biology, a move to chillier and higher altitudes would achieve only two things: cause them to struggle to hover as their metabolic rate drops and sleep most of the day.
“As you get upslope, it’s colder, and also there’s less oxygen available. You can think of this like Everest; people have to go up to basecamp and bring extra oxygen and get used to it up there,” Austin Spence, one of the paper’s authors and a post-doctoral researcher at the University of California Davis’ Department of Wildlife, Fish, and Conservation Biology, told Ars.
Getting high
To study this, Spence and a team of researchers went into the wild in the summer of 2018 and captured 26 Anna’s hummingbirds by luring them into net traps using hummingbird feeders. “Part of the reason we worked with hummingbirds is they’re easy to catch,” Spence said. “We also knew from previous research that hummingbirds were moving upslope.”
These birds hailed from sites between 10 meters above sea level in Sacramento to 2,400 meters above sea level (Mammoth Lakes, California). They were then transported to a western California aviary at 1,215 meters above sea level, and the birds were given time to adjust to their cages, so birds from different altitudes could acclimatize to the same one. From there, the birds were transported to a research station near Mount Barcroft, California, which sits at 3,800 meters above sea level.

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