Hummingbirds Found in Kansas: (Pictures and Sounds)

What types of hummingbirds are found in Kansas?

There are 10 hummingbird species found in Kansas:

  • Allen’s – (Selasphorus sasin)
  • Anna’s – (Calypte anna)
  • Black-chinned – (Archilochus alexandri)
  • Broad-billed – (Cynanthus latirostris)
  • Broad-tailed – (Selasphorus platycercus)
  • Calliope – (Selasphorus calliope)
  • Costa’s – (Calypte costae)
  • Green violetear / Mexican-violetear – (Colibri thalassinus)
  • Ruby-throated – (Archilochus colubris)
  • Rufous – (Selasphorus rufus)

Kansas, known as The Sunflower State, is “home” (breeds in Kansas) to 1 out of the 10 hummingbird species seen in Kansas, the Ruby-throated hummingbird.

The only hummingbird that lives and nests in Kansas, according to the United States Department of Agriculture, is the Ruby-throated hummingbird; all other hummingbirds seen in Kansas are just passing through to their nesting destination.

While it is easy to assume all hummingbirds are the same when we see them only as a jewel-toned flash of color as they jet around our hanging flowers and porches; they have different temperaments, varied nesting habits, diverse coloring and reside in multiple geographical ranges.

Hummingbirds are known to exist within certain established ranges, either as year-round natives or as part of a migratory cycle.

Categories of Hummingbirds:

There are 3 categories of hummingbirds found in Kansas; Year-round natives, seasonal, and rare “Vagrant” hummingbirds.

Year-round hummingbirds in Kansas are rare, but some can survive sub-freezing temperatures and even a few days of sub-zero temperatures.

According to eBird.org, hummingbirds can survive much colder temperatures than most people think with the Ruby-throated and Rufous hummingbirds the most tolerant of cold weather. Reported documentation, through banding, of some hummingbirds tolerating as cold as -9 degrees Fahrenheit with a wind chill factor of -36F.

Seasonal hummingbirds in Kansas are those migrating hummingbirds that choose the long flights south for the winter.

“Vagrant” hummingbirds in Kansas are those hummingbirds that show up in geographical areas far outside their established range and are known in the ornithological circles as “vagrants”.

Year-Round/Native Hummingbirds

Hummingbirds that may be seen in Kansas year-round:
To see sighting map in Kansas, click link below:

Year-round hummingbirds in Kansas are rare, and most will choose to migrate south for the winter, but some of the brave and hardy hummingbirds may choose to tolerate the cold. The ones that choose to tolerate the cold feel this option is less life-threatening than flying thousands of miles south for the winter.

Ruby-throated hummingbirds have documented Kansas sightings in the areas of the entire eastern half of Kansas as well as St. Francis, Goodland, Oakley, WaKeeney, Dighton, Garden City, Lakin, Dodge City, Minneola, Johnson City, Sublette, Hugoton, and Elkhart.

Rufous hummingbirds have documented Kansas sightings in the areas of Kansas City, Ottawa, Topeka, Blue Rapids, Junction City, El Dorado, Arkansas City, Wichita, Newton, Salina, Ellsworth, Hutchinson, Great Bend, Wilson, Osborn, Hays, La Crosse, Larned, Dodge City, WaKenney, Oakley, Dighton, Garden City, Leoti, St. Francis, Goodland, and Elkhart.

Seasonal Hummingbirds

Kansans will see 2 seasonal hummingbird species from early May to the end of September.

They are the same hummingbirds that could possibly over-winter in Kansas, making them possible year-round hummingbirds.
To see Sighting Maps in Kansas, click links below:

Ruby-throated hummingbirds have documented Kansas sightings in the areas of the entire eastern half of Kansas as well as St. Francis, Goodland, Oakley, WaKeeney, Dighton, Garden City, Lakin, Dodge City, Minneola, Johnson City, Sublette, Hugoton, and Elkhart.

Rufous hummingbirds have documented Kansas sightings in the areas of Kansas City, Ottawa, Topeka, Blue Rapids, Junction City, El Dorado, Arkansas City, Wichita, Newton, Salina, Ellsworth, Hutchinson, Great Bend, Wilson, Osborn, Hays, La Crosse, Larned, Dodge City, WaKenney, Oakley, Dighton, Garden City, Leoti, St. Francis, Goodland, and Elkhart.

Rare/Vagrant Hummingbirds

These rare/vagrant hummingbirds are outside of their normal geographic range when seen in Kansas, but are occasionally spotted in Kansas.

Not only do these species of hummingbirds have a wide variety of specific geographic ranges, but they are also known to sometimes interbreed with each other, creating hybrids.
To see site maps in Kansas, click link below:

Anna’s hummingbirds have documented sightings in Kansas along highway 33 between Wichita and El Dorado, along highway 70 just west of Salina in the Russel and Hays areas, and in the areas of Kinsley, Winfield, Dodge City, Garden City, and Kansas City area.

Black-chinned hummingbirds have documented Kansas sightings in the areas of Kansas City, Salina, just above Great Bend, between Hutchinson & Lyons, Ness City, Scott City, Hugoton, and Dodge City.

Broad-billed hummingbirds have documented Kansas sightings in the areas of Kansas City, Manhattan, and Garden City.

Broad-tailed hummingbirds have documented Kansas sightings in the areas of between Lawrence and Ottawa, Newton, the Pretty Prairie/Arlington/Abbyville area, the Pratt/Luka area, Larned, area between Dodge City & Jetmore, Lake City area, Plymell & Garden City area, Syracuse, Hugoton, and Elkhart.

Calliope hummingbirds have documented Kansas sightings in the areas of between Lawrence and Ottawa, between Independence and Fredonia, Osborn, Wilson, Stockton, Hayes, Larned, Oakley/Grainfield area, Garden City, Dodge City, Sublette, Rolla, and Elkhart.

Costa’s hummingbirds have documented Kansas sightings in the areas of Manhattan and Garden City.

Mexican Violeteared hummingbirds have documented Kansas sightings in the area of Manhattan Kansas.

Because of human intervention, in the form of feeding stations and the transplant of exotic flowers in residential areas, some hummingbirds in mild climates are staying rather than migrating.

Read on to find out more about each of these hummingbird species as well as where and when they can be found in Kansas.

Year-Round/Native Hummingbirds

RUBY-THROATED HUMMINGBIRD – (Archilochus colubris)

Conservation Status: Least concerned
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Apodiformes
Family: Trochilidae
Genus: Archilochus
Species: A. colubris

Ruby-throated hummingbirds are the most commonly seen and can be a year-round native bird to Kansas. Their main residence is mostly in the mid-west and on the east coast of the United States. 

Sightings map documents the Ruby-throated hummingbird is seen in every area of Kansas

The only hummingbird that lives and nests in Kansas, according to the United States Department of Agriculture, is the Ruby-throated hummingbird; all other hummingbirds seen in Kansas are just passing through to their nesting destination.

The Ruby-throated hummingbird’s scientific name originated from Carl Linnaeus, a Swedish botanist, who first listed this scientific classification as “Trochilus colubris”. It’s name changed over a hundred years later and was reclassified by Ludwig Reichenbach, a German botanist to “Archilochus colubris”, which is its current scientific name, meaning “top thief” or “sky spirit/sun-god bird”.

Male Ruby-throated hummingbirds have a striking iridescent blood-red gorget, stopping at the neckline. He is identified with a dull metallic green topside, a light gray underbelly and black wings. The Ruby-throated hummingbird is a smaller species of hummingbirds weighing less than 4.5 grams or 2 U.S. dimes and is 2.8 to 3.3 inches in length. Their lifespan is approximately 3-5 years. 

Male Ruby Throat KS
Adult Male Ruby-Throated Hummingbird
Photo by: blooms.everafter
Taken: Kansas
Male Ruby throated 3 WI 1
Adult Male Ruby-Throated Hummingbird
Photo by: andy_raupp

Female Ruby-throated hummingbirds have a white throat with some light stippling and are typically larger than the males. The oldest female Ruby-throated hummingbird has been recorded at 9 years, almost double that of the male. 

However, the average lifespan of a Ruby-throated hummingbird is approximately 3-5 years.

Female Ruby Throated KS
Female Ruby-Throated Hummingbird
Photo by: blooms.everafter
Taken: Kansas
Female Ruby Throated 2 KS
Female Ruby-Throated Hummingbird
Photo by: blooms.everafter
Taken: Kansas

Note: The flower that this female Ruby-throated hummingbird is drinking from is called Goldflame Honeysuckle Vine.

Female FANNED FEATHERS Ruby Throat KS
Female Ruby-Throated Hummingbird
Photo by: blooms.everafter
Taken: Kansas

Juvenile male and female Ruby-throated hummingbirds during their initial stages of life resemble their mother exhibiting a white throat with light stippling.

As the males mature, they begin to display a few specks of color near their neckline and eventually their bolder red throat feathers become more dominant and stately displaying a colorful gorget.

Juvenile females show a light faint grey stippling on their throat. As both sexes mature their less vivid and lighter colored plumage will begin to mature and become darker in color.

Juv Ruby Throated KS
Juvenile Ruby-Throated Hummingbird
Photo by: blooms.everafter
Taken: Kansas
Juv Ruby Throated 2 KS
Juvenile Ruby-Throated Hummingbird
Photo by: blooms.everafter
Taken: Kansas

Note: This juvenile Ruby-throated hummingbird has a signature red fleck on his gorget while his head is turned in this lighting showing the beginning stages of his adolescence.

Juv Ruby Throat with frog KS
Juvenile Ruby-Throated Hummingbird
Photo by: blooms.everafter
Taken: Kansas
Baby Juv Ruby Throated KS
Baby/Juvenile Ruby-Throated Hummingbird
Photo by: blooms.everafter
Taken: Rose Hill, Kansas

Note: The newly white fluffy down feathers on this baby/juvenile Ruby-throated hummingbird’s bottom. Also, notice the nice fat reserves they have accumulated by being fed by their diligent mother which will sustain them through adolescence.

Baby Juv Ruby Throat MN
Baby/Juvenile Ruby-Throated Hummingbird
Photo by: MaryLou Ziebarth

There are two migration routes for the Ruby-throated hummingbird during the spring and fall migrations.

The first migration route is a direct but exhausting nonstop journey southwest over the Gulf of Mexico to Mexico and then down to Central America for the winter.  The flight distance over the Gulf of Mexico is over 500 miles. Although this is the direct “shortroute, there are numerous obstacles faced by these birds. 

Some obstacles include not being able to rest, no means to refuel or eat and having to avoid the dangerous tropical Atlantic hurricanes while flying to their destination. To make matters worse, depending on how you look at it, they migrate during the dark hours of the night or are taking the “Red-eye flight”.

Researchers believe their small size makes the energy expenditure of their grueling trans-oceanic migration pattern more taxing for males than for females even though they both double their body’s fat prior to making the migration across the Gulf of Mexico.

The second migration route is over 2,000 miles, flying along the coastline outlining the Gulf of Mexico. Although this is the “long” route, it allows the opportunity to rest and refuel even though there are fewer food source guarantees along the way.

Scientists are unclear and continue to investigate as to why one group of birds would prefer to take one route over the other.
See my article: Hummingbird Migration in Kansas

Ruby-throated hummingbirds prefer open woodlands and are often seen in parks, gardens, and backyards. They are solitary birds except during mating periods when they are fiercely territorial and aggressive towards hummingbirds of other species.

Even though these hummingbirds have an aggressive side they can still be eaten by predators such as large invertebrates, praying mantises, orb-weaver spiders, and dragonflies.
See my article: 10 Common Things That Kill Hummingbirds

See pictures of male, female, and juvenile Ruby-throated hummingbirds here…..

Hear sounds of Ruby-throated hummingbirds here…..

RUFOUS HUMMINGBIRD – (Selasphorus rufus)

Conservation Status: Near threatened
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Apodiformes
Family: Trochilidae
Genus: Selasphorus
Species: S. rufous

Rufous hummingbirds are a migrating species and the second most commonly seen hummingbird in Kansas. They are slowly building up a reputation for handling colder regions more effectively than Ruby-throated hummingbirds.

Rufous hummingbirds are more tolerant of the extreme cold and have been documented by eBird.org through banding practices and have been seen in temperatures of -9 degrees Fahrenheit with a wind chill factor of -36 degrees Fahrenheit during the winter.

See my article:  3 Reasons Why Hummingbirds Are Banded

The height of the season to witness Rufous migrants in Kansas is during fall migration from late October to early December.

Some Kansans hummingbird admirers leave hummingbird feeders up all winter long to provide life-nourishing nectar to the most commonly seen hummingbird residents in Kansas, the Ruby-throated and Rufous hummingbirds.

This selfless act also provides nectar to other migrating species unable to migrate because of injury or old age.
See my article: 11 DIY Ways to Keep Hummingbird Nectar From Freezing

This sightings map shows that Rufous hummingbirds have been documented in the areas of Kansas City, Ottawa, Topeka, Blue Rapids, Junction City, El Dorado, Arkansas City, Wichita, Newton, Salina, Ellsworth, Hutchinson, Great Bend, Wilson, Osborn, Hays, La Crosse, Larned, Dodge City, WaKenney, Oakley, Dighton, Garden City, Leoti, St. Francis, Goodland, and Elkhart.

Rufous hummingbirds make the longest migrations of any bird in the world. They travel making a clockwise circuit of western America every year that is approximately 3,900 miles.

Hummingbird enthusiasts are extremely valuable when they plant flowering plants to attract hummingbirds and provide feeders with homemade hummingbird nectar to contribute to successful migration. These welcoming habitats provide and ensure safe travels as well as a reliable sanctuary for rest and refueling during their journey.

The Rufous hummingbird gets its name from the Latin word rubrum meaning “red” which is used to describe its reddish-brown coloring. 

Male Rufous hummingbirds display an iridescent orange-red gorget with rusty-colored flanks and tail. They have a white to beige underbelly and a black bill. Males can also have green plumage with specks of green color on their rustic-looking backs or on the crown of their head along with chocolate brown dorsal feathers. Their size is 2.8 inches to 3.5 inches in length and weighs 3.2 grams.

Male Rufous 7 OR
Male Rufous Hummingbird Photo by: Kevin Walsh

Note: The iridescent orange-red gorget in this lighting.

Male Rufous 4 OR
Male Rufous Hummingbird Photo by: Kevin Walsh

Note: The gorget appears chocolate brown in this lighting, however, you can still see a glimmer of his iridescent orange-red gorget with some hints of yellow.

Jace Rufous 1 WA
Male Rufous Hummingbird
Photo by: jace_the_bird_nerd

Juvenile male Rufous hummingbirds have a rustic look with small iridescent orange specks of color on their throats.

Juvenile Rufous hummingbirds are so similar in coloring and temperament to an Allen’s hummingbird that they are practically indistinguishable in the field. Therefore, identification is established by range rather than appearance.

Juv Rufous WA
Juvenile Rufous Hummingbird
Photo by: jace_the_bird_nerd

Female Rufous hummingbirds are green and white with some iridescent orange feathers on their throat. Their tail is dark with white tips and an orange-red base. Female Rufous hummingbirds are slightly larger than the males in anticipation of producing offspring.

Female Rufous OR 1
Female Rufous Hummingbird
Photo by: Kevin Walsh

They have one of the northernmost breeding ranges of any hummingbird in the world; migrating north from Mexico and nesting as far north as Alaska to breed during the summer months. They are polygamous and will mate with several partners in a season.

Rufous hummingbirds are highly territorial and aggressive towards other hummingbirds and animals. They are fearless and have a reputation for chasing away not only other hummingbirds but even large birds and rodents from their favorite feeders. They have been known to even attack squirrels and chipmunks that come too close to their nest.

Their flying acrobatic skills can outmaneuver all other hummingbird species, making them extremely competitive at feeders.

Rufous hummingbirds have excellent memories and have been known to investigate the location of an old hummingbird feeder years after the feeder has been removed.

During a capture and release banding operation in British Columbia, the oldest living recorded female Rufous hummingbird was 8 years and 11 months old.

During a capture and release banding operation in British Columbia, the oldest living recorded female Rufous hummingbird was 8 years and 11 months old.
See my article: 3 Reasons Why Hummingbirds Are Banded

Due to habitat loss in the Pacific Northwest, Rufous hummingbirds are listed at “near threatened” status by the IUCN red list of threatened species.

See pictures of male, female and juvenile Rufous hummingbirds here…..

Hear sounds of Rufous hummingbirds here…..

Seasonal Hummingbirds

Kansas’s seasonal hummingbirds are the same as year-round hummingbirds that are identified above, the Ruby-throated and the Rufous hummingbirds.

Rare/Vagrant Hummingbirds

ALLEN’S HUMMINGBIRD – (Selasphorus sasin)

Conservation Status: Least concerned
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Apodiformes
Family: Trochilidae
Genus: Selasphorus
Species: S. sasin

Allen’s hummingbirds are rare migratory visitor to Kansas because they commonly reside and nest along the California coast and winter in Mexico. However, some continue their migration and wander farther north into Wisconsin, south into Texas and continue their journey as far as Florida being noted as rare migrants.

The common name of Allen’s hummingbird is in commemoration of Charles Andrew Allen (1841-1930), an American collector and taxidermist. 

Male Allen’s hummingbird shows an iridescent orange-red gorget. They are green-backed with a green forehead and rust-colored flanks, rump, and tail. When their tail feathers are fanned out you can see their chocolate-colored tips. Allen’s hummingbirds are 3.3 inches to 3.5 inches in length and weigh 2-4 grams.

DSC00745 Male Allens WATERMARK 1
Adult Male Allen’s Hummingbird

Note: The iridescent orange-red gorget in this lighting.

DSC00654 crop WATERMARKED
Adult Male Allen’s Hummingbird

Note: The gorget can appear chocolate brown in certain lighting.

Females and juveniles Allen’s hummingbird have similar coloring as the males, but lack the iridescent gorget.

Humm parents Mate to Nest
Female Allen’s Hummingbird
Photo by: aarongomperts

See my article: Hummingbird Parents: (Mating to Nesting)

See my article: Baby Hummingbirds: (Egg to Fledgling)

DSC01134 Male juv Allens WATERMARK use
Juvenile Male Allen’s Hummingbird

Note: On a tomato cage defending a feeder.

DSC00998 baby WATERMARK use
Baby/Juvenile Male Allen’s Hummingbird

Note: On a tomato cage and hiding in a tomato plant near a feeder.

Juvenile Allen’s hummingbirds are so similar in coloring and temperament to a Rufous hummingbird that they are practically indistinguishable in the field. Therefore, identification is established by range rather than appearance.

Their nesting season is perfectly timed to when the regions have the most rainfall which helps provide prolific nectar producing flowers for their offspring.

Male Allen’s hummingbirds perform a striking, quick back-and-forth courtship dance resembling the movement of a pendulum. They have one of the most complex territorial dive displays of any North American hummingbird.
See my article: Hummingbird Dance: 5 Interpretive Explanations…..

Male and female Allen’s hummingbirds are not social birds. They do not associate with one another outside of breeding. Similar to a Rufous hummingbird, Allen’s hummingbirds are highly territorial and can be aggressive not only towards other hummingbirds but will also attack any species; even larger predatory birds such as hawks.

Their habitat consists of open woodlands, dry chaparral vegetation consisting of dense shrubs, thorny bushes and riparian wetlands.

Allen’s hummingbirds are absent at mountainous elevations above 9,000 feet due to the lack of hummingbird flowers that would otherwise serve as their nectar source.

See pictures of male, female and juvenile Allen’s hummingbirds here…..

Hear sounds of Allen’s hummingbirds here…..

ANNA’S HUMMINGBIRD – (Calypte anna)

Conservation Status: Least concerned
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Apodiformes
Family: Trochilidae
Genus: Calypte
Species: C. anna

Anna’s hummingbirds are named after Anna Massena, Duchess of Rivoli. They are a rare visitor to Kansas since they are seen mainly in the Western United States.

Sightings map show Anna’s hummingbirds have documented sightings in Kansas along highway 33 between Wichita and El Dorado, along highway 70 just west of Salina in the Russel and Hays areas, and in the areas of Kinsley, Winfield, Dodge City, Garden City, and Kansas City area.

Male Anna’s hummingbirds are the only hummingbird species in North America with a red crown. They are identified as mostly green, gray, and magenta in color. The males have a flashy and colorful iridescent magenta gorget and crown. Their size ranges from3.5 inches to 4.3 inches in length and they weigh 2.4 to 4.5 grams.

The gorget on a male hummingbird is named after the protective metal piece in a suit of armor that covers the wearer’s throat to prevent injury when in battle. Since male hummingbirds are very aggressive with each other when fighting for their own territory, this name is appropriate and fitting to describe their physical attributes.

Male Annas 7
Adult Male Anna’s Hummingbird
Photo by: Kevin Walsh

Note: The iridescent magenta gorget and crown with a metallic green shiny back.

Adult Male Annas Stanford Dish Trail CA
Adult Male Anna’s Hummingbird
Photo by: rwm_inthewild
Male Annas 4
Juvenile Male Anna’s Hummingbird
Photo by: Kevin Walsh

Note: This Anna’s hummingbird could be a juvenile in those awkward teenage years or it could be during a molting stage.

Juv Male Annas OR
Baby/Juvenile Male Anna’s Hummingbird
Photo by: Kevin Walsh

Note: This baby/juvenile male Anna’s hummingbird is beginning to show his magenta head feathers near his temple along with some faint color starting to show on his gorget. 

Female Anna’s hummingbirds are overall not as colorful as the males, appearing pale green in color. Females can also have a gorget, but it is a smaller patch of magenta. Females tend to have a pale white line over each eye that makes them distinctive.

Adult Female Annas at Gamble Garden CA
Adult Female Anna’s Hummingbird
Photo by: rwm_inthewild
Female Annas OR 1
Baby/Juvenile Female Anna’s Hummingbird
Photo by: Kevin Walsh

The Anna’s hummingbird predominantly breeds in northern Baja California and parts of Southern California, however, due to the transplanting of exotic ornamental plants in residential areas along the Pacific Coast and Inland Deserts, their breeding range has expanded up the Western Seaboard. Anna’s hummingbirds have the northernmost year-round range of any hummingbird species.

Female Anna’s hummingbirds raise their young with no help from the males.

Anna’s hummingbirds protect their territory with elaborate dives targeted towards predatory birds and even towards people they perceive to be threatening. 

See pictures of male, female and juvenile Anna’s hummingbirds here…..

Hear sounds of Anna’s hummingbirds here…..

BLACK-CHINNED HUMMINGBIRD – (Archilochus alexandri)

Conservation Status: Least concerned
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Apodiformes
Family: Trochilidae
Genus: Archilochus
Species: A. alexandri

Black-chinned hummingbird’s scientific name is in commemoration of Dr. Alexandre, a French doctor who was the first to discover the species in Mexico. They are a rare visitor to Kansas.

Sighting map show Black-chinned hummingbirds have documented Kansas sightings in the areas of Kansas City, Salina, just above Great Bend, between Hutchinson & Lyons, Ness City, Scott City, Hugoton, and Dodge City.

Male Black-chinned hummingbirds are identified by their royal purple gorget, showing a small glimmer of color right near the neckline like a buttoned-up shirt. Since the male purple gorget or throat color is minimal, at times they can appear to look all black. They have metallic green on their backs and flanks with white on their underbelly. Their dark tail is forked and their bill is black. Their size is 3.25 inches to 3.5 inches in length and weigh 2.8-5.6 grams.

Adult Black chinned CO
Male Black-Chinned Hummingbird
Photo by: shaunwilseyphotography
Male Black Chinned ID
Male Black-Chinned Hummingbird
Photo by: sony_alpha_male

Female and juvenile Black-chinned hummingbirds have no gorget, but have a dark rounded tail with white tips and beige margins on the dorsal feathers that turn dark black as they mature. Their head and back reflect the dull metallic marbled colors of beige, greens, whites, yellow-green and dark browns, looking similar to the scales found on a snake.

Female Black chinned AZ 1
Female Black-Chinned Hummingbird
Photo by: hummingbirdsbysurprise

Black-chinned hummingbirds have the smallest known genetic material of all living vertebrates or mammals. They hybridize and readily crossbreed with other hummingbird species. Black-chinned hummingbirds can live up to 10 years, which is extremely long in comparison to other birds and animals of similar size.

Because of their small size, Black-chinned hummingbirds are at risk of being preyed upon by larger insect-eating birds or larger insects such as a praying mantis. Black-chinned hummingbirds are known to use a decoy strategy by constructing their nest near larger and more active bird nests reducing the chance of predators around their nest.
See my article: 10 Common Things That Kill Hummingbirds

While typically a territorial species, if Black-chinned hummingbirds find themselves in an area with a large population of hummingbirds and food sources of plenty, their territorial behaviors will reduce and they will play nice and share.

See pictures of male, female and juvenile Black-chinned hummingbirds here…..

Hear sounds of Black-chinned hummingbirds here…..

BROAD-BILLED HUMMINGBIRD – (Cynanthus latirostris)

Conservation Status: Least concerned
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Apodiformes
Family: Trochilidae
Genus: Cynanthus
Species: C. latirostris

Broad-billed hummingbirds travel frequently to the United States near the southern Mexican border, however few rare/vagrant’s migrate and travel to Kansas.

Sightings map shows the Broad-billed hummingbirds have documented Kansas sightings in the areas of Kansas City, Manhattan, and Garden City.

Male Broad-billed hummingbirds feature a bright blue-green gorget that spreads back towards its shoulders. Juvenile males show off a full charcoal dark grey body with flecks of metallic blue on their throat and a light green neck and backside. They sport a long beak that is bright orange-red accented with a signature black tip. Their size ranges from 3.25 inches to 4 inches in length and weighs 3-4 grams.

Adult Male Broad Billed AZ
Adult Male Broad-billed Hummingbird
Photo by: Aaron Gomperts

Female Broad-billed hummingbirds are identified with a completely dark bill and a longer white accent above the eyes.

Juvenile male and female Broad-billed hummingbirds are both predominantly metallic green on their topside with a white underbelly. Their tails are dark in color and forked.

Broad Billed 2 Madera Canyon AZ arron cropped
Young Adult Male Broad-billed Hummingbird
Photo by: Aaron Gomperts

Broad-billed hummingbird nests are distinguishable because they do not decorate the outside of their nests with lichens but instead choose to construct their nests with outside grass fibers, bits of leaves and bark while using spider webs to glue and hold the nest together. The nest that the female builds hangs on a single long slender branch.

Astonishingly, unlike other hummingbird population counts, the Broad-billed hummingbird has shown an actual general population increase in recent years.

In Arizona, the oldest recorded male Broad-billed hummingbird was 9 years and 1 month old when he was captured and released from a banding operation.
See my article: 3 Reasons Why Hummingbirds Are Banded

See pictures of male, female, and juvenile Broad-billed hummingbirds here…..

Hear sounds of Broad-billed hummingbirds here…..

BROAD-TAILED HUMMINGBIRD – (Selsaphoris platycercus)

Conservation Status: Least concerned
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Apodiformes
Family: Trochilidae
Genus: Selsaphoris
Species: S. platycercus

The Broad-tailed hummingbird, though usually residing in Mexico and as far south as Guatemala during the winter, is a rare/vagrant hummingbird resident to Kansas.

Sightings map show Broad-tailed hummingbirds have documented Kansas sightings in the areas of between Lawrence and Ottawa, Newton, the Pretty Prairie/Arlington/Abbyville area, the Pratt/Luka area, Larned, area between Dodge City & Jetmore, Lake City area, Plymell & Garden City area, Syracuse, Hugoton, and Elkhart.

They have a migrant and non-migrant population that begins in the south of Mexico. The ones that migrate north to breed will do so during spring migration and will pass through Arizona, Colorado, Wyoming, Idaho and reach as far north as Montana.

Once the breeding season is complete, Broad-tailed hummingbirds once again depart and begin their southbound fall migration to Mexico to winter and meet up with their non-migrant population.

Male Broad-tailed hummingbirds have an iridescent ruby-red gorget. Both males and females Broad-tailed hummingbirds have green topside and pale underbellies with bright white eye rings and broadly rounded tails. Their size is medium build and ranges from 3.3 inches to 3.8 inches in length and weighs 3.6 grams.

Male Broad tailed CO
Male Broad-Tailed Hummingbird
Photo by: shaunwilseyphotography
Male Broad tailed 3 CO
Male Broad-Tailed Hummingbird
Photo by: shaunwilseyphotography
Male Broad tailed 5 preening CO
Male Broad-Tailed Hummingbird
Photo by: shaunwilseyphotography

Note: Preening flight feathers is an important daily routine to maintain hygiene and to keep the feathers flexible, strong, in alignment, and parasite-free.

Female and juvenile Broad-tailed hummingbirds have no gorget, but have green topsides from their head to their tail and pale to beige underbellies with bright white eye rings and broadly rounded tails. 

Female Broad tailed CO
Female Broad-Tailed Hummingbird
Photo by: shaunwilseyphotography
Female Broad tailed 2 CO
Female Broad-Tailed Hummingbird
Photo by: shaunwilseyphotography
Female Broad tailed 3 CO
Female Broad-Tailed Hummingbird
Photo by: shaunwilseyphotography

Note: Hummingbirds beat their wings 80 beats per second. While hovering, the wings move back and forth forming a figure eight or infinity symbol. This powerful movement creates a fanning effect as noticed by the ruffling feathers on both sides of her lower back. 

Juv Broad tailed 2 CO Pollen
Juvenile Male Broad-Tailed Hummingbird
Photo by: shaunwilseyphotography

Note: The thick blanket of pollen on its bill and throat. This juvenile Broad-tailed hummingbird has been busy pollinating and drinking nectar from flowers to sustain its high metabolism. 

JuvBaby Broad tailed CO
Baby/Juvenile Broad-Tailed Hummingbird
Photo by: shaunwilseyphotography

Note: The newly white fluffy down feathers on this baby/juvenile Broad-tailed hummingbird’s bottom. Also, notice the nice fat reserves they have accumulated by being fed by their diligent mother which will sustain them through adolescence.

The Broad-tailed hummingbird favor habitats in the understory of mature forest woodlands such as pine and oak groves. They chose to nest on the branches of trees and have been known to return to the same nesting ground each year, roughly 70% of the time.

Their breeding time coincides with the peak time of flowering native plants for maximum food resource availability. Their favorite nectar producing flower plants include: Red Columbine, Indian Paintbrush, Sage varieties, Currants and Scarlet Mint.

They are promiscuous and do not form any kind of a pair bond between male and female birds and again the female raises the young alone.

The Broad-tailed hummingbird has suffered a decline in population since the 1990s, but presently, its population is stable, and it has been shown to have adapted to human habitat encroachment.

See pictures of male, female, and juvenile Broad-tailed hummingbirds here…..

Hear sounds of Broad-tailed hummingbirds here…..

CALLIOPE HUMMINGBIRD – (Selasphorus calliope)

Conservation Status: Least concerned
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Apodiformes
Family: Trochilidae
Genus: Selasphorus
Species: S. calliope

Calliope hummingbirds are named after a Greek mythological muse, who represented poetry and eloquence. Calliope means “beautiful voice” in ancient Greek.

Sightings map shows Calliope hummingbirds have documented Kansas sightings in the areas of between Lawrence and Ottawa, between Independence and Fredonia, Osborn, Wilson, Stockton, Hayes, Larned, Oakley/Grainfield area, Garden City, Dodge City, Sublette, Rolla, and Elkhart.

Calliope hummingbirds are the smallest long-distance migratory bird in the world. They arrive in the spring passing through the Pacific Flyways.

On their southbound journey in the fall, they pass through the Pacific and Rocky Mountain Flyways towards their wintering destination in Mexico.

Male Calliope hummingbirds are easily identified by their iridescent purple crown and long striking spaced outline row of feathers that project down the sides of their throat.  Like many hummingbirds, the backs are metallic green and these birds measure 3 inches in length and weigh 2-3 grams.

Calliope Male ID
Adult Male Calliope Hummingbird
Photo by: sony_alpha_male
Calliope Juv Male ID
Juvenile Male Calliope Hummingbird
Photo by: sony_alpha_male

Note: His bright throat feathers are slowly coming in.

Female Calliope hummingbirds have gray-green crowns and buff-colored flanks which are the underbelly or wing of a bird. Females sport dark tails with white tips.

Calliope Female ID
Female Calliope Hummingbird
Photo by: sony_alpha_male

Like many hummingbirds, Calliopes communicate not just by their song, but also by manipulating their feathers during flight to make different buzzing noises that act as a form of language and communication.

Male Calliope hummingbirds establish a breeding territory and mate with every available female hummingbird that accepts his courtship.

During nest construction, the female Calliope chooses tops of pine cones as her building site. She will also dismantle nests from previous seasons and recycle them in her new nest along with stealing materials from the nests of other birds in order to construct her own.

Therefore, female Calliopes are often chased and attacked by larger and more aggressive hummingbirds such as Allen’s and Rufous hummingbirds. To avoid these attacks, the Calliope maintains a relatively low profile in comparison to other species.

Because Calliope hummingbirds have a more restricted wintering range than most hummingbirds, they are particularly vulnerable to habitat loss and natural disasters, such as climate change and wildfires.

During a capture and release banding operation in Idaho, the oldest living recorded female Calliope hummingbird was 8 years and 11 months old when she was captured twice, once in 2007 and again in 2014.
See my article: 3 Reasons Why Hummingbirds Are Banded

See pictures of male, female and juvenile Calliope hummingbirds here…..

Hear sounds of Calliope hummingbirds here…..

COSTA’S HUMMINGBIRD – (Calypte costae)

Conservation Status: Least concerned
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Apodiformes
Family: Trochilidae
Genus: Calypte
Species: C. costae

The Costa’s hummingbird, though usually residing in Mexico and as far south as Guatemala during the winter, is a rare accidental vagrant hummingbird to Kansas.

Sightings map show Costa’s hummingbirds have documented Kansas sightings in the areas of Manhattan and Garden City.

Costa’s hummingbird was named in 1839 by Jules Bourcier to commemorate Louis Marie Pantaleon Costa, the French ornithologist who was an avid collector of hummingbirds.

Male Costa’s hummingbirds have a bright reddish-purple cap and gorget. Their gorget has long streaming throat feathers, similar to a Calliope hummingbird. Having green backs and flanks, their back and wings are black and their throat and tail have patches of white. Their size ranges from 3 inches to 3.5 inches in length and weighs 2-3 grams.

Male Costa 6 AZ
Adult Male Costa’s Hummingbird
Photo by: hummingbirdsbysuprise
Male Costa 1 CROP GOOD
Juvenile Male Costa’s Hummingbird
Photo by: hummingbirdsbysuprise

Note: His bright throat feathers are slowly coming in.

Female Costa’s hummingbirds are not as vibrant and display in color, a grayish-light green back with a dusty white underbelly.

Adult Female Costas 1 CROP
Adult Female Costa’s Hummingbird
Photo by: hummingbirdsbysuprise

Female Costa’s hummingbirds migrate north to breed. They are a desert-dwelling species and build their nests in open areas with scarce vegetative cover. They have been known to nest on the tops of cacti. The thorns of the plant act as a deterrent to predators that may attempt to eat the eggs or nestlings.

Their habitat consists of desert scrub and washes including grasslands where they thrive on desert plants or ocotillos.

Male Costa’s hummingbirds are extremely territorial and can come across as being the meanest sheriff in town, especially when defending “their” feeders. Their aggressive conduct is equivalent to the known quarrelsome and combative behaviors of the Rufous hummingbird.

Costas feeding war CROP hummsuprise
Adult Male and Female Costa’s Hummingbird
Photo by: hummingbirdsbysuprise

See my article: Why Hummingbirds Chase Each Other: Is it Friend or Foe?

Costa’s hummingbirds have no known predators, however, the largest threat to Costa’s hummingbirds is human encroachment in the form of the desert being plowed and cleared for settlement and grazing.

They are known to interbreed and produce hybrids between Anna’s and Black-chinned hummingbirds.

See pictures of male, female and juvenile Costa’s hummingbirds here…..

Hear sounds of Costa’s hummingbirds here…..

GREEN-VIOLETEARS HUMMINGBIRD – (Colibri thalassinus)

Conservation Status: Least concerned
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Apodiformes
Family: Trochilidae
Genus: Colibri
Species: C. thalassinus / Mexican violetear

The Green-violetears or Mexican-violetears (Violet-ear) hummingbird gets its name from the Latin word thalassinus meaning “color of the sea”.

They are a rare/accidental hummingbird to Kansas because they are mostly a resident of Mexico and Central America. Recently, there have been some seasonal movements observed as they wander into the United States as far north as Wisconsin, Michigan, and even Canada.

Sightings map document the Mexican-violetears hummingbirds have documented Kansas sightings in the area of Manhattan Kansas.

Male Green-violetear hummingbirds are iridescent green in color with a show of bright violet ear patches on each side of their neck (hence the name “violet-ears”). The tail of this hummingbird is metallic blue-green with bronze central tail feathers that feature a black band underneath. Their size ranges from 3.8 inches to 4.7 inches in length and they weigh 5-6 grams. 

These species of hummingbirds are found on the edge of cloud forests from Mexico to Nicaragua where they enjoy a high level of tropical humidity in their environment. This dark hummingbird is commonly seen in forest edges and clearings.

Green-violetear hummingbirds are somewhat nomadic. Scientists do not know much about their migration patterns as they have not been well-studied. But of the data that has been collected, the Mexican Violetear is typically found in central Mexico, central America, and northern South America.

Like many other kinds of hummingbirds, the Green-violetear hummingbird is a solitary nester. They forage for nectar and insects alone rather than in a flock, but groups of these hummingbirds can be seen around flowering trees, such as the coffee-shade Inga tree.

See pictures and hear sounds of Mexican violet-ear hummingbirds here…..

Keep your eyes peeled, observe and enjoy the multiple types of hummingbirds found in Kansas!

See my article: Hummingbird Migration in Kansas

Happy Hummingbird Watching!

Elizabeth Donaldson

Hi Everyone! I have always loved our backyard and have been fascinated with all the wildlife living there. I am especially amazed by the skill, strength, and beauty of hummingbirds. I hope this article answered your questions.

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