Small bird, big trick: How a hummingbird chick acts like a caterpillar to survive
A white-necked jacobin hummingbird chick. (Credit: Scott Taylor/CU Boulder)
When Jay Falk and Scott Taylor first saw the white-necked Jacobin hummingbird chick in Panamaās dense rainforest, the bird biologists didnāt know what they were looking at.

A white-necked jacobin hummingbird chick. (Credit: Michael CastaƱo-DĆaz)
The day-old bird, smaller than a pinky finger, had brown fuzz all over its body. When Falk and Taylor walked closer to the nest, the chick began twitching and shaking its headāa behavior they had never seen in birds before.
It turns out the hummingbird might fend off predators by mimicking a poisonous caterpillar that lives in the same region. In a published March 17 in Ecology, Taylor, associate professor in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at CU Boulder, and his team described this unusual mimicry behavior for the first time in hummingbirds.Ģż
āWe know so little about what nesting birds do in the tropics,ā said Falk, the paperās first author and postdoctoral fellow in Taylorās lab. āBut if we put more effort into observing the natural world, we might discover these kinds of behavior are very common."
A chance discovery
White-necked jacobin hummingbirds are common in Central and South America. Male birds have shimmering blue and green feathers, while females tend to sport low-key green plumage.
The tropical rainforest is a dangerous place for small birds, said Falk, whoās also a researcher at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. Snakes, monkeys, birds and even insects all prey on them. Prior studies have suggested that bird chicks in the tropics are more likely to be eaten by predators than those in temperate forests.
So how can tiny hummingbird chicks survive? Falk may have stumbled on the answer during a trip to SoberanĆa National Park in Panama in 2024.

A white-necked jacobin hummingbird was incubating its eggs. (Credit: Michael CastaƱo-DĆaz)
Despite the birdsā frequent visits to Falkās feeders outside his research station in Panama, Falk had never seen a white-necked jacobin chick or its nest before.
But last March, co-authors Michael CastaƱo at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute and Sebastian Gallan-Giraldo at the University of Antioquia in Colombia discovered a female jacobin hummingbird incubating an egg in its nest, not far from a forest trail. The nest, smaller than Falkās palm, was made of plant parts to blend in perfectly with the surrounding environment.
Over the following month, the team closely monitored the nest and witnessed a chick hatch from the egg. Unlike most hummingbirds that are born naked, the jacobin chick was covered in long brown feathers, looking nearly identical to the nest material. Thatās when the team witnessed the chickās unusual jerking behavior. Scientists had never reported a similar behavior in any other hummingbird species.
āI started texting a video to people and asking them, āWhat does this look like?āā said Taylor. āAnd invariably, they said, āThat looks like a caterpillar.ā It was very exciting.ā
On the second day after the egg hatched, the team saw a predatory wasp approach the chick when the mother was away. As the wasp hovered above the nest, the chick started to twitch its body vigorously like it had for the researchers, swinging its head from side to side. A few seconds later, the wasp flew away.Ģż
Surviving the tropical rainforest
The jacobin hummingbird chick reminded Falk and Taylor of a paper they came across previously. Another team of researchers reported that a young , a songbird native to the Amazonian rainforest, might resemble toxic orange caterpillars from the region by having a bright orange coat and waving its head from side to side when disturbed.
Falk and his colleagues looked into other caterpillars in this region of Panama and found that many have similar-looking brown hairs that can give painful stings to predators and even kill them. Some of these caterpillars also shake their heads when they feel threatened, much like the chick.
Scientists refer to this survival strategy of mimicking the defensive signaling of a harmful species as Batesian mimicry. For example, some non-venomous milk snakes have developed a pattern of red, yellow and black coloring similar to that of venomous coral snakes to ward off predators.
āA lot of these really classic examples of Batesian mimicry involve butterflies mimicking other butterflies, or snakes mimicking other snakes. But here, we have a bird potentially mimicking an insect, a vertebrate mimicking an invertebrate,ā Taylor said.
While the study described a single observation, the researchers hope to test their theory in the future through experiments like placing artificial chicks with different looks and behaviors in nests to see which are more likely to be attacked by predators. They also hope to encourage birdwatchers and citizen scientists to document more hummingbird nests.
āOur perception of the natural world is very biased by our own thoughts about what could be possible,ā Taylor said. āItās incredible what we can discover, but we really have to think broadly.āĢż
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