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Fruit diet of Alouatta guariba and Brachyteles arachnoides in Southeastern Brazil: comparison of fruit type, color, and seed size
Fruit is an important food resource for neotropical primates. In this study I compare the fruit diet of sympatric brown howlers ( Alouatta guariba ) and southern muriquis ( Brachyteles arachnoides ). Feeding behavior was studied over 12 months and fruit species consumed were identified and assigned...
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Published in: | Primates 2008-01, Vol.49 (1), p.1-8 |
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Main Author: | |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Fruit is an important food resource for neotropical primates. In this study I compare the fruit diet of sympatric brown howlers (
Alouatta guariba
) and southern muriquis (
Brachyteles arachnoides
). Feeding behavior was studied over 12 months and fruit species consumed were identified and assigned to the categories fruit type, fruit color, and seed size. Observed-fruit feeding records were compared with expected records determined from local availability of the fruit of the tree species. I also determined dietary overlap. Fruit consumption occupied 8 and 12% of the feeding time of
A. guariba
and
B. arachnoides
, respectively. Fruit from eight tree species were consumed by the former and fruit from twenty-two species by the latter. Patterns of fruit selection of
A. guariba
and
B. arachnoides
varied widely. Although howlers and muriquis converge behaviorally by selecting fruit with common attributes (fleshy/unprotected, violet and brown/black-colored), unlike
A. guariba
,
B. arachnoides
fed on immature seeds of fleshy/protected and dry fruit. Large seeds were ingested, and defecated intact, by
B. arachnoides
only. There was little overlap of fruit diet even within categories that had been selected by both, suggesting that dietary divergence is occurring at the interspecific level. Different resource exploitation probably mediates the coexistence of
A. guariba
and
B. arachnoides
in low diversity, semideciduous forests, where the environment imposes narrow limits on primate food choices. |
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ISSN: | 0032-8332 1610-7365 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10329-007-0050-5 |