Feeding resource partitioning between two understorey insectivorous birds in a fragment of Neotropical cloud forest

Abstract The food habits and niche overlap based on diet composition and prey size of two species of understorey insectivorous birds were investigated in an area of montane rain forest in the state of Minas Gerais, southeastern Brazil. A total of 43 birds were captured: 33 individuals of Conopophaga lineata (Conopophagidae) with 13 recaptures, and 10 individuals of Myiothlypis leucoblephara (Parulidae) with 12 recaptures, from which were obtained respectively 33 and 10 fecal samples. Fragments of 16 groups of arthropods, plus insect eggs, were identified in these samples. Conopophaga lineata predominantly consumed Formicidae (32%) and Isoptera (23.6%). However, the index of alimentary importance (AI) of Isoptera (3.53) was lower than other groups such as Formicidae (AI = 61.88), Coleoptera (AI = 16.17), insect larvae (AI = 6.95) and Araneae (AI = 6.6). Myiothlypis leucoblephara predominantly consumed Formicidae (28.2%) and Coleoptera (24.4%), although Coleoptera and Hymenoptera non-Formicidae had the highest values of AI (38.71 and 22.98 respectively). Differences in the proportions of the types of arthropods consumed by birds were not enough to reveal their separation into feeding niches (overlap = 0.618, p observed ≤ expected = 0.934), whereas differences in the use of resources was mainly due to the size of the prey (p<0.001), where C lineata, the species with the highest body mass (p<0.001) consumed larger prey. It is plausible that prey size is an axis of niche dimension that allows the coexistence of these species.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Manhães,M. A., Dias,M. M., Lima,A. L. C.
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Instituto Internacional de Ecologia 2015
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842015000800176
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id oai:scielo:S1519-69842015000800176
record_format ojs
spelling oai:scielo:S1519-698420150008001762015-12-11Feeding resource partitioning between two understorey insectivorous birds in a fragment of Neotropical cloud forestManhães,M. A.Dias,M. M.Lima,A. L. C. birds cloud forest insectivores Neotropical region niche Abstract The food habits and niche overlap based on diet composition and prey size of two species of understorey insectivorous birds were investigated in an area of montane rain forest in the state of Minas Gerais, southeastern Brazil. A total of 43 birds were captured: 33 individuals of Conopophaga lineata (Conopophagidae) with 13 recaptures, and 10 individuals of Myiothlypis leucoblephara (Parulidae) with 12 recaptures, from which were obtained respectively 33 and 10 fecal samples. Fragments of 16 groups of arthropods, plus insect eggs, were identified in these samples. Conopophaga lineata predominantly consumed Formicidae (32%) and Isoptera (23.6%). However, the index of alimentary importance (AI) of Isoptera (3.53) was lower than other groups such as Formicidae (AI = 61.88), Coleoptera (AI = 16.17), insect larvae (AI = 6.95) and Araneae (AI = 6.6). Myiothlypis leucoblephara predominantly consumed Formicidae (28.2%) and Coleoptera (24.4%), although Coleoptera and Hymenoptera non-Formicidae had the highest values of AI (38.71 and 22.98 respectively). Differences in the proportions of the types of arthropods consumed by birds were not enough to reveal their separation into feeding niches (overlap = 0.618, p observed ≤ expected = 0.934), whereas differences in the use of resources was mainly due to the size of the prey (p<0.001), where C lineata, the species with the highest body mass (p<0.001) consumed larger prey. It is plausible that prey size is an axis of niche dimension that allows the coexistence of these species.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessInstituto Internacional de EcologiaBrazilian Journal of Biology v.75 n.4 suppl.1 20152015-11-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842015000800176en10.1590/1519-6984.09114
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-br
tag revista
region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Manhães,M. A.
Dias,M. M.
Lima,A. L. C.
spellingShingle Manhães,M. A.
Dias,M. M.
Lima,A. L. C.
Feeding resource partitioning between two understorey insectivorous birds in a fragment of Neotropical cloud forest
author_facet Manhães,M. A.
Dias,M. M.
Lima,A. L. C.
author_sort Manhães,M. A.
title Feeding resource partitioning between two understorey insectivorous birds in a fragment of Neotropical cloud forest
title_short Feeding resource partitioning between two understorey insectivorous birds in a fragment of Neotropical cloud forest
title_full Feeding resource partitioning between two understorey insectivorous birds in a fragment of Neotropical cloud forest
title_fullStr Feeding resource partitioning between two understorey insectivorous birds in a fragment of Neotropical cloud forest
title_full_unstemmed Feeding resource partitioning between two understorey insectivorous birds in a fragment of Neotropical cloud forest
title_sort feeding resource partitioning between two understorey insectivorous birds in a fragment of neotropical cloud forest
description Abstract The food habits and niche overlap based on diet composition and prey size of two species of understorey insectivorous birds were investigated in an area of montane rain forest in the state of Minas Gerais, southeastern Brazil. A total of 43 birds were captured: 33 individuals of Conopophaga lineata (Conopophagidae) with 13 recaptures, and 10 individuals of Myiothlypis leucoblephara (Parulidae) with 12 recaptures, from which were obtained respectively 33 and 10 fecal samples. Fragments of 16 groups of arthropods, plus insect eggs, were identified in these samples. Conopophaga lineata predominantly consumed Formicidae (32%) and Isoptera (23.6%). However, the index of alimentary importance (AI) of Isoptera (3.53) was lower than other groups such as Formicidae (AI = 61.88), Coleoptera (AI = 16.17), insect larvae (AI = 6.95) and Araneae (AI = 6.6). Myiothlypis leucoblephara predominantly consumed Formicidae (28.2%) and Coleoptera (24.4%), although Coleoptera and Hymenoptera non-Formicidae had the highest values of AI (38.71 and 22.98 respectively). Differences in the proportions of the types of arthropods consumed by birds were not enough to reveal their separation into feeding niches (overlap = 0.618, p observed ≤ expected = 0.934), whereas differences in the use of resources was mainly due to the size of the prey (p<0.001), where C lineata, the species with the highest body mass (p<0.001) consumed larger prey. It is plausible that prey size is an axis of niche dimension that allows the coexistence of these species.
publisher Instituto Internacional de Ecologia
publishDate 2015
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842015000800176
work_keys_str_mv AT manhaesma feedingresourcepartitioningbetweentwounderstoreyinsectivorousbirdsinafragmentofneotropicalcloudforest
AT diasmm feedingresourcepartitioningbetweentwounderstoreyinsectivorousbirdsinafragmentofneotropicalcloudforest
AT limaalc feedingresourcepartitioningbetweentwounderstoreyinsectivorousbirdsinafragmentofneotropicalcloudforest
_version_ 1756426597378818048