We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Birds foraging for fruits and insects in shrubby restinga vegetation, southeastern Brazil.
- Authors
Gomes, Verônica Souza da Mota; Loiselle, Bette A.; Alves, Maria Alice S
- Abstract
Understanding how birds use vegetation to obtain food resources has implications for habitat conservation and management. Restinga is a poorly known and threatened tropical habitat, associated to the Atlantic forest, that could benefit from this kind of information to know which plants can be used and dispersed by birds that can help on the maintenance of this habitat. Frugivorous and insectivorous birds are important components of tropical ecosystems, such as restinga. To provide more information regarding the ecology of restinga, we studied the feeding behavior and spatial use of this vegetation by birds at Restinga de Jurubatiba National Park, southeastern Brazil. We found that feeding behavior was similar to that recorded for the same species in other vegetation types. In addition, spatial use of the restinga vegetation by the most abundant species did not overlap greatly, except for two insectivorous species that used different foraging maneuvers and two frugivorous birds that foraged in flocks. The two most abundant species were generalists in their diet and were capable of feeding at the ground level on sand substrate.
- Subjects
PARQUE Nacional da Restinga de Jurubatiba (Brazil); BRAZIL; BIRDS; FORAGING behavior; FRUGIVORES; HERBIVORES; ENTOMOPHAGOUS insects; ENVIRONMENTAL sciences; ECOLOGY
- Publication
Biota Neotropica, 2008, Vol 8, Issue 4, p21
- ISSN
1678-6424
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1590/S1676-06032008000400001