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An Anna’s hummingbird (Calypte anna) feeding on flowers of an Island Mallow (Malva assurgentiflora), which was one of the plant species included in this study.
Photo Credit: Ammon Corl/UC Berkeley
Scientific Frontline: "At a Glance" Summary: Dietary Alcohol in Nectar-Feeding Animals
- Main Discovery: Detectable levels of alcohol naturally occur in the nectar of most flower species, establishing that nectar-feeding animals routinely consume low doses of ethanol as part of their daily diets.
- Methodology: Researchers extracted nectar from 29 plant species in a botanical garden and measured the ethanol content using an enzymatic assay, subsequently calculating the estimated daily alcohol consumption for various nectarivores based on their specific caloric intake requirements.
- Key Data: Ethanol was detected in at least one flower from 26 out of the 29 tested plant species, with peak concentrations reaching 0.056 percent by weight. Based on daily caloric needs, an Anna's hummingbird consumes approximately 0.2 grams of ethanol per kilogram of body weight per day, an intake roughly equivalent to a human consuming one standard alcoholic drink.
- Significance: Chronic, low-level dietary ethanol ingestion is widespread across animal species, highlighting an evolutionary metabolic tolerance and indicating that alcohol may serve undiscovered physiological, signaling, or appetitive functions rather than simply causing intoxication.
- Future Application: The collected findings will inform a larger genomic project assessing physiological adaptations across hummingbird and sunbird species, specifically targeting the identification of unique metabolic detoxification pathways and advancing the comparative biology of lifelong ethanol exposure.
- Branch of Science: Integrative Biology, Zoology, Ecology, Evolutionary Biology
- Additional Detail: Feather analyses from the Anna's hummingbird revealed the presence of ethyl glucuronide, a specific metabolic byproduct of ethanol, confirming that these birds actively metabolize ingested alcohol much like mammals do rather than simply passing it through their systems.

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