Eulampis jugularis females, Purple-throated hummingbirds at Heliconia jugularis
In a fascinating example of sexual dimorphism and plant-animal relationships: the female hummingbird with a smaller body and long, curved bill pollinates this species of Heliconia while the male is adapted to pollinate another. Aquatint etching by Bryan Poole, 2008
Size: 4328px × 5880px
Photo credit: © Natural History Museum, London / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: 2000, 2008, 21st, adapted, angiosperm, angiospermae, animal, apodiformes, aquatint, aves, bird, bryan, carib, century, claw, commelinid, dimorphism, etching, eulampis, evolution, evolved, female, flowering, flying, heliconia, heliconiaceae, humming, hummingbird, jugularis, lobster, lobster-claw, magnoliophyta, monocot, monocotyledon, plant, pollinate, pollination, pollinator, poole, purple, purple-throated, red, sauropsid, sauropsida, sexual, throated, trochilidae, zingiberales