Pink + pink = gold? Hybrid hummingbird's feathers don't match those of its parents

John Bates, the senior author of a new study in the journal Royal Society Open Science reporting on the , first encountered the unusual bird while doing fieldwork in Peru's Cordillera Azul National Park, which protects an outer ridge on the eastern slopes of Andes mountains. Since the area is isolated, it would make sense for a genetically distinct population to emerge there. "I looked at the bird and said to myself, 'This thing doesn't look like anything else.' My first thought was, it was a new species," says Bates, a curator of birds at Chicago's Field Museum.

When Bates and colleagues gathered more data about the specimen in the Field Museum's Pritzker DNA Lab, however, the results surprised everyone. "We thought it would be genetically distinct, but it matched Heliodoxa branickii in some markers, one of the pink-throated hummingbirds from that general area of Peru," says Bates. If it was H. branickii, it didn't make sense for the bird to have gold throat feathers; in the family, it's rare for members of the same species to have dramatically different throat colors.

The gold-throated hybrid, center, with its parent species H. branickii (left) and H. gularis (right), in the Field Museum’s collections. Credit: Kate Golembiewski, Field Museum

The gold-throated hummingbird hybrid in the Field Museum’s collections. Credit: Kate Golembiewski, Field Museum

The gold-throated hybrid, center, with its parent species H. branickii (left) and H. gularis (right), in a drawer the Field Museum’s collections. Credit: Kate Golembiewski, Field Museum

Field Museum senior research scientist Chad Eliason with hummingbirds in the museum's collections. Credit: Kate Golembiewski, Field Museum

Field Museum curator John Bates holding the hybrid hummingbird in the museum's collections. Credit: Kate Golembiewski