1997
DOI: 10.1080/02541858.1997.11448422
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Fruit selection in the olive thrush: the importance of colour

Abstract: Free-living olive thrushes Turdus o/ivaceus were offered a choice of wild olive Olea africana fruit of four colours, representing four ripeness categories. The thrushes ate mostly black fruit (ripest), followed by maroon (ripe) and olivecoloured (partially ripe) fruit. When riper fruit was unavailable, the thrushes selected more maroon or olive-coloured fruit. Green fruit (unripe) were never eaten, even when these were the only ones available. When offered pieces of dyed pear Pyrus communis, the thrushes prefe… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…The data available, however, do not allow us to conclude that there is a clear and general preference for red fruits. Although in some cases red was preferred (McPherson 1988;Puckey et al 1996;Traveset & Willson 1998;Giles & Lill 1999;Alves-Costa & Lopes 2001), there are other cases where different colors were preferred over red (Murray et al 1993;Willson 1994;Sanders et al 1997;Schmidt 2002;Stanley et al 2002;Galetti et al 2003;Honkavaara et al 2004). These results suggest that color preferences are not an invariant trait in frugivorous birds, but rather show ample variation among species.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 90%
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“…The data available, however, do not allow us to conclude that there is a clear and general preference for red fruits. Although in some cases red was preferred (McPherson 1988;Puckey et al 1996;Traveset & Willson 1998;Giles & Lill 1999;Alves-Costa & Lopes 2001), there are other cases where different colors were preferred over red (Murray et al 1993;Willson 1994;Sanders et al 1997;Schmidt 2002;Stanley et al 2002;Galetti et al 2003;Honkavaara et al 2004). These results suggest that color preferences are not an invariant trait in frugivorous birds, but rather show ample variation among species.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Third, the artificial green fruits used showed higher reflectance than all other colors; hence, they were (relative to these) more conspicuous than would be expected under natural conditions. Instead, avoidance of unripe fruits seems to be a more likely reason for the avoidance of green color by Redwings and Eurasian Blackbirds (McPherson 1988;Sanders et al 1997). The use of visual cues for assessing fruit quality has been previously reported (Traveset & Willson 1995;Stanley et al 2002), although it can be strongly contextdependent (e.g.…”
Section: Color Preferences Of the Different Speciesmentioning
confidence: 97%
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