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The aim of the experiment was to examine prey size selection of peled (Coregonus peled Gmel.) larvae using Strauss linear index for food selection. For this purpose larval peled were held in illuminated cages at two stocking densities (10 000 and 40 000 individuals per cage) in three water bodies of diverse trophic characteristics. In the first days of rearing peled larvae fed on zooplankton up to 0.5 mm in length. Then most peled larvae significantly more often selected organisms up to 1 mm, which were most abundant in the environment. Under good feeding conditions, reared fish selected medium-sized zooplankters (from 0.6-1.0 mm length class, less often those 1.0-1.5 mm in length). Stronger food pressure for small prey appeared at a time of poor feeding conditions. Fish fed rather randomly on larger planktonic organisms (>1.5 mm), which were not abundant in the environment. Statistically significant differences were observed in food selection between the cages with different stocking densities, even when the feeding preferences were similar. Large variability in the feeding behaviour of peled larvae was observed during the whole rearing period.
We describe the diet of introduced European hedgehogs Erinaceus europaeus (Linnaeus, 1758) in a New Zealand dryland system and provide the first quantitative analysis of food selectivity for this species. We also describe and compare the diets of nine hedgehogs and measure dietary overlap between these individuals. The most commonly eaten foods were beetles, including rare native species (in 94% of droppings), earwigs (92%), spiders (25%) and native skinks (14%). Remains of at least three skinks were found in one dropping. Earwigs and darkling beetles (Tenebrionidae) were the most preferred food types, and Hymenoptera and cylindrical bark beetles (Colydiidae) were least preferred. Consumption of most foods mirrored their availability. Most individuals’ diets conformed to the pattern seen at the population scale, with 21–54% of dry faecal mass derived from beetles and 13–39% from earwigs. One animal frequently consumed large amounts of fruit. Dietary overlap between pairs of individuals was high (mean Horn’s index, 0.84). This may be the result of limited opportunities to diversify in a very moisture-limited and low diversity habitat.
According to Optimal Foraging Theory a consumer should select its diet in order to maximise net energy intake per unit of foraging time. Therefore, the Antarctic scavenging sea star Odontaster validus can be expected to choose food items of high profitability and ignore those of low profitability. Laboratory experiments with agar models of food items were performed to investigate the foraging behaviour and food selectivity of O. validus. Freshly caught sea stars were first fed with fish meat to minimize differences in their feeding status and then starved for 2 and 4 weeks. Sea stars were divided into three size groups (small – radius 1–3 cm, medium – radius 3–4 cm, large – radius 4–5.5 cm). Agar food items of different quality (low – 1.2 kJ, medium – 2.5 kJ, high – 4.1 kJ) and size (small – 8 cm³ and large – 64 cm³) were utilized in the experiments. Sea stars were individually presented with food items placed on the aquarium bottom, and their behaviour (number and type of investigated food items, time needed for final choice) was observed for 30 minutes. Starved individuals preferentially selected more profitable food items as is predicted by Optimal Foraging Theory. Choice of food item was probably mediated by contact chemoreception. Starvation time and sea star size had significant impact on selectivity. Mean number of food items of different quality investigated by sea stars starved for 2 weeks was higher then in sea stars starved for 4 weeks. Low quality food items were mostly chosen by small sea stars, and never by large individuals starved for 2 weeks. Sea stars O. validus were also capable of distinguishing between small and large food items. Final choice made by sea stars presented with food items of differing size depended on their size with large and medium individuals choosing mostly large food items. Sea stars starved for 2 weeks chose higher proportion of large food items than individuals starved for 4 weeks. Such strategy in accordance with Optimal Foraging Theory allows for flexibility in O. validus feeding behaviour and enables this species to survive in harsh marine environment, where food resources accessible during the Antarctic winter are scarce and unpredictable in space and time.
The guanaco Lama guanicoe Muller, 1776 has a wide distribution along the Andes and Patagonia. We studied the feeding behaviour of a guanaco population that lives over 4100 m altitude in the Andes of north-central Chile. By contrasting the diet of guanacos during a dry year with that of a wet year and comparing it with the plant availabilities in the field, we tested the hypothesis that the guanaco is a generalist herbivore. We predicted that under such extreme habitat conditions guanacos should consume whatever plant species are available in the environment, especially in a dry year, when vegetation is scarcer. In addition, we compared its diet at three different age classes. We estimated the diet through the microhistological analysis of plant remains found in guanaco pellets collected during January of 1997 (ie after a dry year) and 1998 (ie after a wet year; 41 vs 495 mm, respectively). Then, we computed dietary preferences, food niche-breadth, and food-niche overlap between years and among age classes. Vegetation cover and plant species richness were higher during the wet than during the dry year. The most common plants in the environment were perennial graminoids and legumes. Contrary to our prediction, the guanaco preferred a few plant species, showing a relatively narrow diet breadth that changed little between years differing in plant abundances. The diet proportions differed among the three age classes, however. Our data indicate that at least in this high-elevation population, guanacos are selective and non-opportunistic herbivores. This specialized feeding behaviour is puzzling given the energetic demands of living in a harsh environment with low availabilities of resources. The hypothesis that this is due to the lower palatability of the plants not eaten, remains to be tested.
Reported cases of fragile bones and kidney damage from the Agder counties, south Norway, motivated this study of the diets of radio-collared moose Alces alces Linnaeus, 1758 during summer 1995. Birch Betula pubescens (39.8%), bilberry Vaccinium myr- tillus (13.3%), and bog asphodel Narthecium ossifragum (10.8%) were the main plants eaten, but only birch and bog asphodel were preferred when use was compared to relative availability. Bog asphodel is highly toxic and has been reported to cause severe kidney damage in domestic sheep Ouis aries and cattle Bos taurus. Hence, we hypothesized high levels of bog asphodel in the diet of moose in Agder is the link to kidney damage frequently reported from this area. However, laboratory studies have not documented damage to the skeleton from high intake of this species, and we therefore hypothesized fragile bones are caused by other factors than eating bog asphodel.
Mexico has eight endemic lagomorph species, several of which are endangered. For conservation reasons it is necessary to know more about their diet. In a first step we applied the method of fecal pellet analysis to the cottontailSylvilagus floridanus (Allen, 1890). Since it is common in Mexico, information on its diet should provide a useful baseline with which to compare the diets of other Mexican lagomorphs. At Ixtacuixtla, we recorded vegetation and analyzed fecal pellet content once in August (wet season) and once in March (dry season) at 4 sampling sites representing different habitat types. The comparison of vegetation and diet records suggestedS. floridanus to occupy the same dietary niche in the different habitats. Measures of niche breadth showedS. floridanus to be neither a generalist nor a specialist. Nevertheless, it appeared to be quite selective in consuming particular herb and grass species even when they became scarce during the dry season. Since the vegetation record only poorly represented the rabbits’ diet, a more focused approach is suggested for future studies: first, to identify the relevant food species in the diet, second, to obtain data on the availability of these, and third, to concentrate on time points when changes in resource state could be a limiting factor.
The diet of the wild rabbit Oryctolagus cuniculus (Linnaeus, 1758) on Alegranza Island (Canary Islands) was studied by microhistological examination of faecal samples. We compared the presence of each food-plant species in the faeces across a year in comparison with plant availability. Two areas were studied, Llano de la Vega and La Caldera. At the first site, Suaeda vera and Chenoleoides tomentosa were the most common plants, while at the latter it was Euphorbia regis-jubae. In general, species belonging to the Chenopodiaceae were most commonly eaten by rabbits. Plants such as Chenoleoides tomentosa and Salsola vermiculata were most important in the diet in every season. Levin's niche-breadth was broader across the seasons in the study site of La Caldera than at Llano de la Vega. Furthermore, this parameter yielded the highest values (broadest niche) during the spring at both sites. Most important plants eaten by rabbits showed green vegetative parts through all seasons. Rabbits selected some plants independently of their availability, even in this reduced insular environment. The feeding behaviour of rabbits in Alegranza, selecting certain species, must have had important consequences on the composition and distribution of the vegetation over the years. This negative effect on island vegetation has been shown to occur on many oceanic islands of the world where rabbits have been introduced.
Dietary chemistry and an animal digestive physiology should be considered in any explanation of behavioral patterns of food use, as both influence dietary pre­ference. In the degu Octodon degus (Molina, 1782), a generalist herbivorous rodent inhabiting central Chile, we determine the profitablity of natural food-plant items by measuring digestive characteristics, such as retention time and assimilation rate while also considering the effects of food chemistry. Under our experimental conditions, degus seem to select food based on at least two complementary factors, plant nutri­tional value (water content and the nitrogen:fiber ratio) and digestive function. We found that dry-matter intake was negatively and significantly correlated with mean retention time, that is O. degus ate more food when mean retention time was shorter and vice versa. A higher food intake concomitant with a shorter mean retention time, allow degus to process more food per unit time resulting in a higher assimilation rate than alternative food sources. We conclude that both food quality and the digestive physiology of animals should be considered in explaining the underlying processes of foraging ecology.
An important behavioural adaptation for animal species with variable or unpredictable food availability is storing food. Food availability for large field mouseApodemus peninsulae (Thomas, 1907) is not reliable. We conducted a series of tests with the large field mouse to determine food hoarding behaviour, response when their hoarded food was removed, and whether perishable foods were treated different than non perishable foods. The study was conducted in four semi-natural enclosures (4 × 3 × 1 m), established on the Donglingshan Mountain near Beijing, China. Thirteen large field mice were placed in enclosures and offered wild apricotPrunus armeniaca seeds and Liaodong oakQuercus liaotungensis acorns. Our results indicated that although large field mice hoarded seeds in larder and scatter patterns, they more frequently exhibited larder hoarding. Liadong oak acorns were generally consumed near the feeder, whereas apricot seeds were more frequently transported to the nest box. Only apricot seeds were scattered among hoard sites. When seeds were removed from hoarding sites the mice responded by taking increased amounts of seeds to their nest for larder and scatter hoarding. Hoarding sites were not randomly distributed throughout the enclosure.
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