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. 2023 Feb 28;11:e14953. doi: 10.7717/peerj.14953

Figure 1. The type of vegetation where the territories of the Broad-tailed hummingbirds were monitored.

Figure 1

(A) The study was carried out in areas where land use was changed from pine-oak forest to rainfed agriculture and induced pasture, traversed by an extensive network of roads and trails that vary in intensity of human, animal (livestock, dogs) and mechanical (vehicles, tractors) traffic. (B) These roads form a mosaic of flowering patches of different sizes of the shrub Bouvardia ternifolia, one of the main floral resources for this hummingbird species. Photo credit: Carlos Lara.