Abstract
The dietary items fed to regent honeyeater,
Xanthomyza phrygia, nestlings and fledglings by adults
were recorded in two consecutive breeding seasons in the
Bundarra–Barraba region west of Armidale, New South Wales. Insects were
the most common dietary items fed to juveniles (53% of identified
items), followed by lerp (26.5%) and nectar (20.5%). Nestlings
were fed mostly insects (58% of feeds), and carbohydrates (nectar and
lerp) made up the rest of their diet. Fledglings, however, were fed mainly
carbohydrates (nectar and lerp comprised 61.2% of all items) while
protein from insects was the other major component of their diet. Males tended
to feed juveniles more insects than did females, although there were no
significant divisions of labour between parents in selecting dietary items for
nestlings or fledglings. This study highlights the importance of insects and
lerp in the diet of juvenile regent honeyeaters, and the diversity of plant
species on which their parents foraged. The species shows a broader resource
selection than was found in previous studies which considered the species to
be highly nectarivorous and selective for a few key eucalypt species. The
importance of insects and carbohydrates other than nectar in the diet of the
regent honeyeater needs to be recognised in the development of conservation
strategies for the species.
Subject
Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
14 articles.
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