The fate of Colombian ornithologist Daniela Garzon changed forever when a chance assignment at university led her to fall in love with hummingbirds — she'd then go on to follow in the 100-year-old footsteps of a female bird collecting pioneer Elizabeth Kerr. Garzon, who is now completing her undergraduate studies in biology at the University of Tolima, grew up in the central Colombian city of Ibague, Tolima and says her eureka moment came in her third-semester of her degree, when her vertebrate biology professor assigned her to do a presentation on Trochilidae, the hummingbirds."I didn't want to have that assignment, I actually tried to exchange it for the group with toucans in it," Garzon says, adding that by the time the assignment was done, she was smitten with hummingbirds, of which Colombia more than 160 species, more than any other country."I fell in love with the hummingbirds because they were the first step in getting to know all the other birds and ornithology," she says. "I also love their impressive colors and the function that they fulfill in the ecosystem."Garzon's current project involves looking at the interaction between hummingbirds and flowers."Different flowers deposit pollen on different parts of the hummingbird's body, for example, on the head or beak," she says,"We then look at the pollen underneath the microscope to determine what kind of pollen it is and where it comes from, which gives scientists a lot of information about which birds interact with which plants."Garzon says that hummingbirds, which are found from the United States down through Latin America, are impressive birds that can even fly backwards."Scientists are always discovering new things about them," she says. In December of 2020, Garzon was invited to be part of a five woman expedition called "BIO: wings, songs and colors." These women spent four days in the vicinity of Fresno, Tolima, eventually collecting 89 species, including some endemic species and those in danger of extinction. The trip was part of a series of expeditions to follow in the footsteps of naturalist Frank Chapman's Colombian Expedition of the American Museum of Natural History from 1911 to 1912. But prior to Chapman's arrival, Elizabeth Kerr was working alone collecting mammal and bird specimens in Colombia and was in correspondence with Chapman."They used the specimens she collected as a base for their own expedition," Garzon says, adding that Kerr's contribution was overlooked for almost a century, with most historians reviewing the documents not picking up on the fact that she was a woman."We didn't have her route exactly, but with small points of reference from historical documents, we selected Fresno, Tolima, as the place we were going to search," she says.
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