As is characteristic of hummingbirds, the sword-billed hummingbird can fly backwards and
hover in the air. It also exhibits higher than average
wing-disk loading than other members of its family.
Diet and feeding The sword-billed hummingbird is a
specialist feeder, feeding mainly on the nectar of flowers with long corollas, including
Brugsmania sanguinea,
Datura stramonium,
Passiflora mixta,
P. pinnatistiplua,
P. mollissima and
P. sexflora, along with flowers from the genera
Aethanthus,
Fuchsia,
Salpichroa, and
Solanum. It probes flowers from below while feeding, and is a
trap-line feeder, visiting a specific series of flowers in a regular, consistent sequence. It also
hawks for insects, catching flying insects by keeping the bill open.
Reproduction Breeding occurs from February to March. Nests are
cup-shaped and made of moss, and are usually hung among root fibers high above the ground. To obtain nectar, the hummingbird will stick its long bill down the tube of the corolla (both of which are almost exactly the same length), drink, and then retreat and hover for a few seconds before repeating the process. Other species, such as insects, may be able to access the flower's nectar but do so by puncturing the base and feeding through a hole instead of the corolla tube. Additional evidence of coevolution is that both species also inhabit the same territory range along the Andean mountains. If sword-billed hummingbird populations were to decline, there would most likely be a negative impact on the abundance of
P. mixta flowers due to their extreme coevolution. == Status and conservation ==