Necker Island Highlights: Flamingo Feet, Hybrid Ibises and a Seductive Lemur

 

Flamingos and Scarlet Ibises mingle on Necker Island in the British Virgin Islands
 

After years of mentioning Necker Island as the source of the celebrated flamingos and scarlet ibises in the Virgin Islands, I finally got to go on a tour there organized by the Virgin Islands Audubon Society group on St. John. 

 

Richard Branson has transformed this small British Virgin Islands site into a conservation center for once-native flamingos, plus ibises and tropical parrots, as well as an exotic mix of Madagascar lemurs, giant tortoises from Seychelles and even baby kangaroos!

 

As the flamingos on Necker have mated and multiplied in number, some have spread out by flying to other nearby islands, and we are grateful that there are now over 100 flamingos on St. John.

 

Male flamingo getting into position to mate 

 

Besides catching some flamingos mating in the pond, I was most interested in a group of flamingos standing around on the sand. I don’t usually see their bright pink feet. In most of my photos they are standing in the water. 

 

 

I also got some photos of the flamingos in flight, when their feet are visible, but hanging down loosely. 

 

 

Meanwhile, six scarlet ibises were gathered in a tree near the pond – the most I had seen together. 

 

 

Then a pink one flew in. I assumed it was a baby. We were delighted to have a mating pair on St. John this season and their maturing chick has splotchy pink feathers. The young ones’ feathers get redder as they grow up and consume more food (crustaceans and algae) containing the carotenoids that color their feathers.

 

 

Later I learned that there are also some white ibises on the island. And that they mate with the scarlet ones. And have pink babies that grow up to be pink adults. That was a lot for me to process. I started imagining how the social dynamics of color differences worked out for everyone. 

 



I saw a scarlet ibis sitting with a white one, enjoying the shade under a bush. Both  had dark bills so maybe they both were breeding males. Otherwise their bills would be pinkish or tan colored, unless they were just messy from poking around in  the mud looking for food along the edge of the pond. 

 

 

The white and scarlet ibises can mate because they are closely related genetically. Their offspring may not all have exactly the same pinkish coloring though. 

 

 

Despite my love for flashy birds, I have to admit that the most exciting part of my trip was when I had a personal interaction with a red ruffed lemur. I had been doubtful about the wisdom of bringing lemurs from Madagascar to the Virgin Islands, but I was convinced when I learned they are hunted for meat at home, and in danger of extinction. 

 

Red ruffed lemur

 

In the wild, red ruffed lemurs mostly eat fruits and are important distributors of seeds. They also like nectar, and frequently carry pollen from one tree to another on their fluffy fur.  

 

When our tour guide offered us small pellets to feed the red ruffed lemurs, I noticed one sitting by itself looking a bit forlorn (or so I thought). I went over and held out my hand flat with the tiny snack on it. I was quite surprised when the lemur reached out with both its little hands and gently pulled me closer.  

 

 

I know it’s a cliché, but I felt like my heart melted. We stayed together that way for a few minutes after the kibble was gone, and then it was time to move on. A truly unexpected moment of grace.  

 

Some Birds and Bees are ‘Nectar Robbers’

 

Male Antillean Crested Hummingbird piercing a Ginger Thomas flower

 

When I noticed several Antillean Crested Hummingbirds flitting around the Ginger Thomas flowers I thought, how sweet, they are busy pollinating the flowers. But no!

 

I went to get my camera, and took some shots with my telephoto lens. At a distance I hadn’t been able to see exactly what the birds were doing, but when I looked at the photos in my computer I was shocked.  

 

They weren’t even thinking about pollinating the flowers! These birds were entirely bypassing the insides of the trumpet-shaped flowers, where the female stigmas were waiting patiently to receive male pollen grains that would fertilize them. 

 

Instead the hummingbirds were staying outside and sticking their sharp beaks into the flower bottoms, sucking out the sweet liquid directly from the nectar sac. 

 

Flowers produce nectar to provide an enticement and reward for visitors that then pick up pollen (often inadvertently) and transport it from one flower to another. Food in exchange for cross-pollination services. Not a free lunch.      

   

A female Antillean Crested Hummingbird is lighter and lacks the crest.

 

Self-pollination by a flower leads to lack of genetic diversity, with diminished strength and adaptability of the resulting seeds and seedlings. Like many other trees, a Ginger Thomas (Tecoma stans), also known as Yellow Trumpetbush, makes an effort to avoid self-pollination. One measure, for example, is to set different times of day for pollen dispersion and stigma receptivity within a flower, so self-pollination can’t happen by mistake. 

 

The Ginger Thomas really wants the birds and bees to come and bring outside pollen into contact with the flower’s inner reproductive parts. The flower uses its bright yellow color and an enticing scent to attract potential pollinators. How frustrating then for the flowers to instead be poked, probed, and robbed of their laboriously made sweet fluids with nothing to show for it.   

 

In defense of the Antillean Crested Hummingbirds, the issue might be that their bills are too short – maybe only half an inch – so they can’t reach the nectar sac by going through the natural flower opening, which is narrow, and can be two inches deep. Then again, hummingbirds also have long tongues that are designed to extend way out past their bills to allow them to reach deep inside tubular flowers. 

 

Maybe it’s just easier to break in. 


Antillean Crested Hummingbirds hover with up to 80 wing beats per second.  

 

 

Interestingly, although Ginger Thomas has been designated as the official flower of the U.S. Virgin Islands, there is some question about whether it is actually native in these islands. So perhaps it is unfair of me to accuse the crested hummingbirds of violating some ancient coevolution pact in this relationship.  

 

Other common local hummingbirds, the Green-throated Caribs, don’t seem to have any trouble reaching inside the Ginger Thomas flowers and performing pollinator duties. They are larger and have longer, curved bills. Probably also longer tongues. 


Green-throated Carib hummingbirds are larger, and don't steal the nectar. 

 

However, they are happy to go to feeders, bypassing the flowers and their pollination needs altogether. (Something to think about when you put out sugar water for them.) 

 

 

I also saw Bananaquits exploring the Ginger Thomas flowers. They are known as ‘Sugar Birds’, so of course they would be attracted to the sweet nectar. But they certainly don’t have the right type of bill to slip inside the elongated Ginger Thomas flowers. 

 

From watching the Bananaquits, though, I know that they too have long tongues, which they sometimes use to drink from hummingbird feeders. 


Bananaquits have long tongues too.

 

Nevertheless, the Bananaquits followed the example of the Antillean Crested Hummingbirds and just poked holes in the flowers. 

 

 

Meanwhile, it’s not only birds that are nectar robbers. Bees do it too!

 

A few big, shiny black Carpenter Bees came to the Ginger Thomas flowers and went straight for the flower ends. These are native solitary bees – they don’t live in hives with other bees. They are called ‘carpenters’ because they bore holes in tree branches and other wood to make nests. Then they place ‘bee bread’ made out of pollen and nectar in the nests with their eggs to provide food for the emerging larvae. 

 

Female carpenter bee and Antillean crested hummingbird


 

Too bulky to crawl inside Ginger Thomas flower, a Carpenter Bee can use its sharp, wood-cutting mandibles to make an incision at the base of the flower. Then it can suck up nectar from the hole through its straw-like tongue or proboscis, which clearly isn’t long enough to reach down inside the Ginger Thomas flower. Or it might go to a hole already made by a bird to mop up any leftover nectar seeping out.    

 

Carpenter bee poking Ginger Thomas flower

 

European Honeybees come to the Ginger Thomas flowers too. They were brought here to pollinate crops, but they will go to wild trees as well (sometimes reducing nectar availability for native bees). A honeybee will crawl in and out of different flowers, drinking nectar through its proboscis. Meanwhile, it is also collecting pollen in sacs on its legs and transferring some of it to other flowers, thereby facilitating pollination. 

 

But a honeybee might instead use an already-made hole to suck up nectar, as will other possibly pollinating insects, like ants and wasps.

 

Honeybee crawling on Ginger Thomas


 

It turns out that nectar robbing is actually pretty common behavior. Too much thieving from flowers could significantly reduce the ability of trees to get pollinated. Or cause hardship to other would-be pollinators that lose out on going to those flowers and getting nectar as a food source.

 

Yet the Ginger Thomas trees seem to be thriving, despite all the nectar robbing. On the other hand, the Antillean Crested Hummingbirds became pretty scarce after the 2017 hurricanes, and still might need some extra resources. 

 

Perhaps the Ginger Thomas trees have adapted their nectar production to take the skimming into account. Or are actually being generous in feeding the neighborhood birds and bees, and would characterize these interactions as interspecies generosity rather than robbery.