Repository logo

TROPICAL FRUGIVOROUS BIRDS MOLT AND BREED IN RELATION TO THE AVAILABILITY OF FOOD RESOURCES

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Advisor

Coadvisor

Graduate program

Undergraduate course

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Neotropical Ornithological Soc, Usgs Patuxent Wildlife Research Ctr

Type

Article

Access right

Acesso restrito

Abstract

Few studies have investigated how the abundance of food resources influences the phenology of the annual cycles of tropical birds. Frugivorous birds are good models for such investigation because the abundance of their main food types, fruits and arthropods, vary independently from each other. We investigated how the consumption and availability of fruits and arthropods are related to breeding and molt cycles of frugivorous birds in a fragmented landscape of the Brazilian Atlantic forest. We recorded the occurrence of brood patches and the molting of flight feathers in mist-netted birds, from which we also analyzed the contents of fecal samples. Using nonparametric and parametric correlation tests we investigated the relationships among breeding and molt stage with the availability of fruits and arthropods. We found that the availability of fruits and arthropods fluctuates temporally and independently, but both food sources have shortage periods, apparently more pronounced for fruits. During periods when fruit was scarce, birds relied more heavily on arthropods as food. Incubation occurred when fruit availability was high, whereas the molt period that followed was coincident with the availability of arthropods. Although our observational study does not permit definite conclusions regarding the relationship between food availability and the timing of the annual cycle events investigated, it is suggestive that avian breeding and molt cycles coincide with fruit and arthropod availability, respectively. Together with arthropods, fruits are important for nestlings of frugivorous birds, and protein from arthropods may be especially important for the development of new feathers.

Description

Keywords

Arthropod availability, Atlantic Forest, Brazil, Breeding cycle, Diet, Fecal samples, Flight feather molt, Fruit availability, Frugivorous birds, Thraupidae, Turdidae, Tyrannidae, Vireonidae

Language

English

Citation

Ornitologia Neotropical. Athens: Neotropical Ornithological Soc, Usgs Patuxent Wildlife Research Ctr, v. 29, p. S11-S18, 2018.

Related itens

Units

Departments

Undergraduate courses

Graduate programs

Other forms of access