WHITE-EARED HUMMINGBIRD
Cynanthus lucotis

The White-eared Hummingbird, Cyanthus lucotis, breeds occasionally in southeastern Arizona mountains, more commonly in central Mexico and south to Nicaragua. It is known to wander rarely into eastern U.S. in fall and winter.

White-eared Hummingbird, Cynanthus lucotis, adult male

Adult Male (above)

Adult female has white breast, white flanks with green streaking, spotted throat, and green forehead (which is violet in male)

Photographs courtesy of Animal Pictures Archive

NOTE: Although Ruby-throated Hummingbirds are the primary focus of "Operation RubyThroat: The Hummingbird Project", we are also interested in other hummingbird species--especially vagrants that appear in winter (mid-October through mid-March) in the eastern U.S. If you know of a wintering hummingbird east of the Mississippi, please report it to RESEARCH. We will contact a local hummingbird bander about capturing the bird, identifying and banding it, and releasing it unharmed.

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