Hummingbird Content / Hummingbird Content for ϲϿ Davis en Microbes Grow in Hummingbird Feeders But Do Not Likely Pose Health Hazard /news/most-microbes-hummingbird-feeders <p>Many people set up hummingbird feeders in their yards to nurture and watch these high-energy pollinators. But could the sugar water they provide be impacting these tiny feathered friends?</p> <p>A study led by the University of California, Davis, is one of the first to address the potential for sugar water from hummingbird feeders to act as a vector for avian — or even zoonotic — pathogens. It found that the majority of microbes growing in feeders do not likely pose a significant health hazard to birds or humans.</p> March 06, 2019 - 4:25pm Katherine E Kerlin /news/most-microbes-hummingbird-feeders Tiny Tech Tracks Hummingbirds at Urban Feeders /climate/news/tiny-tech-tracks-hummingbirds-at-urban-feeders <p>“Beep” is not a sound you expect to hear coming from a hummingbird feeder. Yet “beeps” abounded during a study led by the University of California, Davis, to monitor hummingbirds around urban feeders and help answer questions about their behavior and health.</p> December 12, 2018 - 1:26pm Katherine E Kerlin /climate/news/tiny-tech-tracks-hummingbirds-at-urban-feeders Tracking Hummingbird Interactions at Urban Feeders /one-health/tracking-hummingbird-interactions-urban-feeders <h2 class="heading--underline"><strong>Feeder behavior&nbsp;offers clues about hummingbird health, disease transmission</strong></h2> <p><em>This blog post is contributed by Pranav S. Pandit, a postdoctoral scholar at the EpiCenter for Disease Dynamics, part of the One Health Institute at the ϲϿ Davis School of Veterinary Medicine.</em></p> December 12, 2018 - 12:19pm Kristin P Burns /one-health/tracking-hummingbird-interactions-urban-feeders