Foraging Behaviour and Resource Selection of the Regent Honeyeater Xanthomyza phrygia in Northern New South Wales
Damon L. Oliver
Emu 100(1) 12 - 30
Abstract
Foraging observations of the endangered Regent Honeyeater show that it has a
more generalised diet, and is less nectar-dependent, than previously
suggested. On average, birds spent 60% of their foraging time feeding
on nectar from the flowers of Mugga Ironbark
Eucalyptus sideroxylon, other eucalypts and three
mistletoe species. Gleaning for lerp and hawking for insects comprised
35% and 5% of their foraging time, respectively. When nectar was
scarce, however, Regent Honeyeaters spent up to 90% of their foraging
time feeding on lerp, honeydew and insects. A variety of different foods were
collected from a broad range of tree and mistletoe species. Mugga Ironbarks
were the most important foraging plants, with 31 other species also used for
food. Regent Honeyeaters, typically, feed in the tallest trees in their
environment; hence, adequate protection should be given to mature trees.
Regent Honeyeaters showed significant variation in their foraging patterns
between years, and at different times of the day. Breeding birds spent a
greater proportion of their foraging time collecting nectar in 1996 than 1995,
due to a higher eucalypt nectar availability in 1996. In both years
nectar-feeding was highest in the morning and late afternoon and lowest in the
middle of the day, when insect and lerp consumption peaked. The degree of
flexibility in the foraging repertoire of the Regent Honeyeater is not unusual
among Australian honeyeaters, although it indicates that different types of
food and a broad range of plants, particularly mature eucalypts, have to be
protected and properly managed to save this declining woodland bird.
Full text doi:10.1071/MU9837
© CSIRO 2000





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