“…However, Bee hummingbirds represent the only clade present at the northernmost limit of the global hummingbird geographic distribution, with species living in the USA and Canada conducting latitudinal migratory movements (Carpenter, Hixon, Russell, Paton, & Temeles, 1993;Kodric-Brown & Brown, 1978;López-Segoviano, Bribiesca, & Arizmendi, 2018). Furthermore, members of this clade are not acting as plentiful or behaviorally dominant species in more complex communities located in Mexico and Central America, where they are winter migrants (Lara et al, 2009;López-Segoviano et al, 2018;Schondube, 2012). This could be caused by the fact that a trade-off appears to limit the ability of species to be good at both migration and their ability to win in aggressive interactions, allowing resident species to be dominant over migrant species (DesGranges & Grant, 1980;Freshwater, Ghalambor, & Martin, 2014; Lara, Corcuera, and Valverde (2018) who propose that in order to win aggressive interactions independently of differences in body mass, species should be genetically distant so that the "disadvantage of being small in aggressive interactions could be overcome over evolutionary time through the accumulation of novel traits that can counteract the advantages of being large" .…”