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World

Photo Of Miniature Figure Viral As Topaz Hummingbird, World's Smallest Bird

The pictures show a miniature figurine, not a real bird. The topaz hummingbird is not the world's smallest bird.

By - AFP | 25 Feb 2022 7:05 AM GMT

A photo is circulating in Facebook posts around the world that claim it shows a topaz hummingbird, the "smallest bird on earth". Another photo is shared in other posts with a similar claim. The claims are false. In fact, both pictures show a miniature figurine, not a real bird. The topaz hummingbird is not the world's smallest bird.

"This is the Hummingbird 'Topaz', the smallest bird on earth," reads a Facebook post from February 11, 2022.

The post has been shared more than 4,500 times.

The photo appears to show a tiny, brightly coloured bird perched on a twig.


Screenshot of the Facebook post captured on February 17, 2022

The same picture was shared in Facebook posts in various countries, including the United States, Nepal and Pakistan.

Similar Facebook posts shared a photo of a different "bird" alongside the claim it showed the world's smallest bird.

"The world's smallest bird, the Humming Bird. It flaps its wings 80 beats within a second," reads a Sinhala-language Facebook post, uploaded on April 22, 2021.


Screenshot of the Facebook post captured on February 17, 2022

The image was shared via multiple posts on Facebook as seen here, here and here.

However, the claims are false.

First photo

A reverse image search on Google found the photo in an Instagram post posted by an account called nvillustration on June 3, 2018. 

The account belongs to a pair of India-based miniature paper-cut artists Nayan Shrimali and Vaishali Chudasama

The post's caption reads: "156/365, Number One Hundred fifty six from our 365 days of miniature art ~ Crimson topaz Hummingbird ..."

It features hashtags including "#paperart", "#artoftheday" and "#papercutartist". 

The Instagram account's description reads: "Creating nature with Paper". 

The same photo was also published on the same day here on their Facebook page, with the same caption.

Their miniature bird artworks have been featured here and here

The artists posted similar creations on the Instagram account as part of a challenge to make one miniature bird every day for one year.

Second photo

A reverse image search found the second picture in an Instagram post published on the account of another miniature artist called malinik_miniatures on July 8, 2020.

"Little Robin landed on my hand," reads the post's caption, which features hashtags such as "#miniature", "#handmade" and "#handsculpted". 

The Instagram account's description reads: "Realistic animal and bird sculptures in 1:12 scale". 

The same photo was also published on the same day here, on the Facebook page Malinik Miniature Animals, also with the same caption.

Both the Instagram account and Facebook page link to the same eBay account, where the artist sells the miniature figurines.

The US-based artist behind the figurines, Ina Gancheva, told AFP in 2019 that a picture of a similar bird figurine that she made was also misrepresented in posts claiming it shows "the world's smallest bird". 

World's smallest bird

The world's smallest bird is the Cuban hummingbird, also known as the bee hummingbird, experts say — not the topaz hummingbird. 

Professor Gary Stiles, an ornithologist at the National University of Colombia's Natural Sciences Institute told AFP in 2019: "The smallest is a hummingbird native to Cuba that weighs up to two grams as an adult."

Andrés Cuervo, ornithology curator of the National University of Colombia, also told AFP that the world's smallest bird was the Cuban hummingbird.

"It's tiny, between five and six centimeters, with a weight between 1.6 and 2.5 grams. They feed on insects and flower nectar," he said. 

According to Guinness World Records, the world's smallest bird is the bee hummingbird of Cuba, not the topaz hummingbird. 

A bee hummingbird (Mellisuga helenae) sucks from a flower at the aviary El Nido, on September 27, 2011, in Ixtapaluca, State of Mexico, near Mexico City. ( AFP / Ronaldo Schmeidt)

Male bee hummingbirds measure 5-6 cm (2-2.4 inches), while male topaz hummingbirds measure 12-23 cm (8-9 inches).

The bee hummingbird has been on the threatened species list of the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by BOOM staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)