Diet switching of seed-eating birds wintering in grazed habitats of the central Monte Desert, Argentina

Although bird population declines associated with land degradation are common, the initial response of organisms to rapid human-induced environmental change is usually behavioral. Reductions in seed availability due to cattle grazing may trigger diet switching in seed-eating birds, but empirical exa...

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Publicado: 2017
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Acceso en línea:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_00105422_v119_n4_p673_Marone
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00105422_v119_n4_p673_Marone
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spelling paper:paper_00105422_v119_n4_p673_Marone2023-06-08T14:34:37Z Diet switching of seed-eating birds wintering in grazed habitats of the central Monte Desert, Argentina energetics expanding specialists Feeding flexibility forb seeds grass seeds land degradation seed preferences seed shortage Although bird population declines associated with land degradation are common, the initial response of organisms to rapid human-induced environmental change is usually behavioral. Reductions in seed availability due to cattle grazing may trigger diet switching in seed-eating birds, but empirical examples of such behavior are lacking. We asked whether cattle grazing changed the composition and reduced the size of seed reserves, and whether seed shortage caused diet shifts in 4 species of seed-eating birds wintering in the central Monte Desert, Argentina. We assessed the soil seed bank composition and the granivorous fraction of each species' diet. Digestive tract or crop contents were obtained by using the flushing method on individuals captured with mist nets, and seeds were sorted and assigned to 1 of 3 functional groups (small grass seeds, large and medium-sized grass seeds, or forb seeds). Cattle grazing reduced the abundance of the preferred large and medium-sized grass seeds by 60-90%. The grass-seed specialists Many-colored Chaco Finch (Saltatricula multicolor) and Ringed Warbling-Finch (Microspingus torquatus) did not change their diets in grazed areas, but the expanding specialists Common Diuca-Finch (Diuca diuca) and Rufous-collared Sparrow (Zonotrichia capensis) incorporated increased proportions of small grass seeds as well as forb seeds into their diets. These results were correctly predicted from species-specific differences in feeding flexibility previously established in cafeteria experiments. Based on species-specific diet composition, the energy reward of seeds by unit mass consumed decreased moderately (5-21%) in the grazed sites for S. multicolor, M. torquatus, and D. diuca. Starch content was similar between grazing conditions for all 3 birds. Although such deficits might be compensated for by a slight increase in absolute mass of seeds or alternative food items consumed in degraded lands, substantial reduction in the availability of grass seeds may reduce the capacity of degraded lands to support specialist granivorous birds. © 2017 Cooper Ornithological Society. 2017 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_00105422_v119_n4_p673_Marone http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00105422_v119_n4_p673_Marone
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic energetics
expanding specialists
Feeding flexibility
forb seeds
grass seeds
land degradation
seed preferences
seed shortage
spellingShingle energetics
expanding specialists
Feeding flexibility
forb seeds
grass seeds
land degradation
seed preferences
seed shortage
Diet switching of seed-eating birds wintering in grazed habitats of the central Monte Desert, Argentina
topic_facet energetics
expanding specialists
Feeding flexibility
forb seeds
grass seeds
land degradation
seed preferences
seed shortage
description Although bird population declines associated with land degradation are common, the initial response of organisms to rapid human-induced environmental change is usually behavioral. Reductions in seed availability due to cattle grazing may trigger diet switching in seed-eating birds, but empirical examples of such behavior are lacking. We asked whether cattle grazing changed the composition and reduced the size of seed reserves, and whether seed shortage caused diet shifts in 4 species of seed-eating birds wintering in the central Monte Desert, Argentina. We assessed the soil seed bank composition and the granivorous fraction of each species' diet. Digestive tract or crop contents were obtained by using the flushing method on individuals captured with mist nets, and seeds were sorted and assigned to 1 of 3 functional groups (small grass seeds, large and medium-sized grass seeds, or forb seeds). Cattle grazing reduced the abundance of the preferred large and medium-sized grass seeds by 60-90%. The grass-seed specialists Many-colored Chaco Finch (Saltatricula multicolor) and Ringed Warbling-Finch (Microspingus torquatus) did not change their diets in grazed areas, but the expanding specialists Common Diuca-Finch (Diuca diuca) and Rufous-collared Sparrow (Zonotrichia capensis) incorporated increased proportions of small grass seeds as well as forb seeds into their diets. These results were correctly predicted from species-specific differences in feeding flexibility previously established in cafeteria experiments. Based on species-specific diet composition, the energy reward of seeds by unit mass consumed decreased moderately (5-21%) in the grazed sites for S. multicolor, M. torquatus, and D. diuca. Starch content was similar between grazing conditions for all 3 birds. Although such deficits might be compensated for by a slight increase in absolute mass of seeds or alternative food items consumed in degraded lands, substantial reduction in the availability of grass seeds may reduce the capacity of degraded lands to support specialist granivorous birds. © 2017 Cooper Ornithological Society.
title Diet switching of seed-eating birds wintering in grazed habitats of the central Monte Desert, Argentina
title_short Diet switching of seed-eating birds wintering in grazed habitats of the central Monte Desert, Argentina
title_full Diet switching of seed-eating birds wintering in grazed habitats of the central Monte Desert, Argentina
title_fullStr Diet switching of seed-eating birds wintering in grazed habitats of the central Monte Desert, Argentina
title_full_unstemmed Diet switching of seed-eating birds wintering in grazed habitats of the central Monte Desert, Argentina
title_sort diet switching of seed-eating birds wintering in grazed habitats of the central monte desert, argentina
publishDate 2017
url https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_00105422_v119_n4_p673_Marone
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_00105422_v119_n4_p673_Marone
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