Foraging behaviour of birds in an arid sand-dune scrubland in Argentina
Pedro G. BlendingerCONICET – Unidad Zoología y Ecología Animal, IADIZA, CC 507, 5500 Mendoza, Argentina. Present address: CONICET – Laboratorio de Investigaciones Ecológicas de las Yungas, Universidad Nacional de Tucumán. CC 34, 4107 Yerba Buena, Tucumán, Argentina. Email: blendinger@birdecology.com.ar
Emu 105(1) 67-79 https://doi.org/10.1071/MU03050
Submitted: 13 October 2003 Accepted: 4 October 2004 Published: 31 March 2005
Abstract
Studies of the foraging behaviour of birds allow exploration of the mechanisms that structure species assemblages. The major objective of this study was to describe relationships among various components of foraging behaviour and whether changes in those relationships reflected seasonal changes in assemblage structure of birds from an arid scrubland of the Monte Desert, Argentina. Foraging behaviour was described in terms of attack manoeuvres, food substrate (i.e. substrate from which food was taken), foraging site (i.e. the substrate and height from where birds launched the attack), and plant species used. Between-species differences in attack manoeuvres, food substrate and foraging site were interrelated, the association being strongest between foraging sites and food substrates. During the non-breeding season, foraging sites and food substrates differentiated species. The most important changes between seasons were related to the arrival in summer of aerial-foraging tyrant flycatchers, a functional group absent during the non-breeding season. Foraging sites explained most of the differences among species groups, suggesting that habitat heterogeneity and structural complexity of vegetation are important environmental variables that determine the avian assemblage structure. Moreover, temporal changes in food availability, mediated by strong seasonality in climate, were important factors that were correlated with compositional and structural variability in functional groups of birds (i.e. granivores-insectivores, surface insectivores and aerial insectivores).
Acknowledgments
This study was supported by a doctoral grant of the National Council for Science and Technology (CONICET) of Argentina, and was partially supported by a CONICET grant (PIP No. 4684). Harry Recher and Van Remsen provided helpful advice on the manuscript. Thanks to Ricardo Ojeda, Manuel Nores, Jorge Gonnet, Stella Giannoni and John Blake for comments on a first draft; to Adriana Rubinstein, Susana Peluc and Dolores Juri for their assistance in the field; and to the Department of Natural Resources of Mendoza for logistical support at Telteca.
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