A bird whose highly adapted dietary system is the perfect vector for the food they eat!
Meet the Mistletoebird
Photo (cropped) Courtesy of patrickkavanagh / CC BY 2.0
The mistletoebird (Dicaeum hirundinaceum) measures 9 to 10 cm long, weighing in at 7.5 to 11 grams. Male birds are glossy blue to black on their upperparts with a bright fiery red chest along with a splash of red under the tail. Below the red chest is a black stripe running down the center of his white belly. The eyes, bill, and legs are black. The bill itself is just over a centimeter long, slender, slightly downcurved, and sharply pointed.
Photo (cropped) Courtesy of jeans_Photos / CC BY 2.0
Female birds are dark gray on their upperparts with a touch of pink under their tails.
Juvenile birds look very similar to female birds, though they have an orange to pink bill, instead of black.
Photo (cropped) Courtesy of patrickkavanagh / CC BY 2.0
This bird is endemic to most of Australia (excluding Tasmania), though also present in the eastern Maluku Islands of Indonesia in the Arafura Sea between Australia and New Guinea.
Photo Courtesy of Mike’s Birds / CC BY-SA 2.0
They are widespread over many parts of the Australian mainland, pretty much wherever Mistletoe is present.
Photo Courtesy of Duncan McCaskill / CC BY 3.0
The Mistletoebird is highly adapted to its diet of mistletoe berries. It lacks the muscular gizzard (food-grinding organ) of other birds, instead, it has a simple digestive system through which the berries pass quickly, digesting the fleshy outer parts and excreting the sticky seeds onto branches. The seed can then germinate quickly into a new plant.
Photo (cropped) Courtesy of PsJeremy / CC BY 2.0
The breeding season for Mistletoebirds is from August to April depending on where they live in Australia when a pear-shaped nest made from matted plant down and spider web is suspended from a branch or twig. The female builds the nest and incubates the eggs on her own, though the hatchlings are fed by both parents.
Photo Courtesy of Christopher Watson / CC BY-SA 3.0
There was an ecological balance between the parasitic mistletoe and their host trees before this balance was disturbed with excessive forest clearing. Land clearing to accommodate farming practices and population growth created an imbalance that resulted in excessive infestations of mistletoe in some areas leading to forest degradation and a total lack of mistletoe in other areas.
Photo Courtesy of Christopher Watson / CC BY-SA 3.0
This bird, however, is described as of least concern on the IUCN list.
Photo Courtesy of Mike’s Birds / CC BY-SA 2.0
You can watch this bird right here in the video below: