2018
DOI: 10.1111/ibi.12630
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Diet of Neotropical parrots is independent of phylogeny but correlates with body size and geographical range

Abstract: Body mass and geographical range are two main drivers of diet in animals, yet how these factors influence diet in the morphologically and ecologically diverse avian group of Psittaciformes is little known. We reviewed current knowledge of the diet of Neotropical parrots and assessed the relation between diet (breadth and composition), phylogeny, body mass and geographical range. Diet has been documented for 98 of 165 species, but information is available only for 34 of 59 threatened species, and countries with… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(24 citation statements)
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References 68 publications
(108 reference statements)
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“…In this study, fleshy fruit is the most consumed item and this fact was not unexpected given its high presence in the diet of Pyrrhura and other species of small and medium-size psittacids (Renton et al 2015;Botero-Delgadillo et al 2013;Benavídez et al 2018). The high percentage of fruit in the diet of small parrots has been attributed to body size (Matuzak et al 2008;Renton et al 2015;Benavídez et al 2018) and it is linked to energy requirements, due to the fact that small birds need more carbohydrates, because they display higher mass-specific metabolic rates (Suarez and Gass 2002). Furthermore, the high consumption of fruits, especially fruits with small seeds (e.g.…”
Section: Diet Composition Seasonality and Correlation With Food Avaimentioning
confidence: 53%
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“…In this study, fleshy fruit is the most consumed item and this fact was not unexpected given its high presence in the diet of Pyrrhura and other species of small and medium-size psittacids (Renton et al 2015;Botero-Delgadillo et al 2013;Benavídez et al 2018). The high percentage of fruit in the diet of small parrots has been attributed to body size (Matuzak et al 2008;Renton et al 2015;Benavídez et al 2018) and it is linked to energy requirements, due to the fact that small birds need more carbohydrates, because they display higher mass-specific metabolic rates (Suarez and Gass 2002). Furthermore, the high consumption of fruits, especially fruits with small seeds (e.g.…”
Section: Diet Composition Seasonality and Correlation With Food Avaimentioning
confidence: 53%
“…Food resource availability for the Green-cheeked Parakeet did not demonstrate significant differences in this study, possibly due to the lack of food resource species in tree phenology samplings. In the study area, Benavídez (2018) found that the Piedmont forest has a marked seasonality with two different seasons, the dry (May-October) and the wet (November-April) seasons, where the plant community shows phenological behaviour, distinguishing flowering peaks in the dry season and two fruiting peaks, one in wet (fleshy fruit) and another in the middle of the dry season. Annual flowering and fruiting likely result from an influence of environmental factors.…”
Section: Food Resource Availabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…That is, the higher the number of habitats originally used by a species the higher is the likelihood of this species to forage on agricultural lands. Parrots show a great dietary plasticity, which can determine their diversification on habitat use (Renton et al., 2015), and variability among species in dietary plasticity (Benavidez et al., 2018; Blanco et al., 2015) could contribute to explain this result. On the other hand, the relative brain size of birds has been shown to reflect behavioural flexibility (Sol et al., 2005) and inter‐individual variability to colonize anthropogenic habitats like cities (Carrete & Tella, 2011).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%