A NUTRITIONAL ANALYSIS OF FORAGING IN THE MALABAR GIANT SQUIRREL (RATUFA-INDICA)

被引:15
作者
BORGES, RM [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV MIAMI, DEPT BIOL, CORAL GABLES, FL 33124 USA
关键词
FEEDING STRATEGY; GENERALIST HERBIVORE; INDIA; NUTRIENTS; PLANT CHEMISTRY; RATUFA; TROPICAL FOREST; TROPICAL SQUIRREL;
D O I
10.1111/j.1095-8312.1992.tb00652.x
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
The effect of nutrients and their availability on the diet of the herbivorous Malabar giant squirrel Ratufa indica (Sciuridae) was investigated at Magod and Bhimashankar in western India. The daily consumption of food items (percent wet diet) and the intake rates of these items and the contained nutrients (wet g s‐1) were determined by continuous observation of focal animals. Water content was a significant positive predictor of relative food item consumption while mineral contents in general had the opposite effect. The intake rates of water and more digestible nutrients such as nonstructural carbohydrates, as well as the intake rate of minerals such as zinc (at Magod), were significant positive predictors of the relative contribution of an item to the daily diet, thus indicating considerations of feeding costs versus benefits. Tannins, some alkaloids, and other secondary metabolites may negatively influence food choice. Protein content, relative to digestibility reducers, influenced food item consumption only at Bhimashankar. There was seasonal variation in daily biomass consumption. At Bhimashankar, daily biomass consumption increased with the proportion of fruit in the diet while this did not occur at Magod. This is perhaps a result of the higher water content and the lower content of some soluble nutrients within fruit at Bhimashankar relative to Magod. There was also intra‐month variation between individual squirrels in daily biomass of food consumed. Squirrels consumed ephemeral food items opportunistically and non‐ephemeral items such as mature leaves and bark on a regular daily basis. Squirrels probably obtained minerals and nitrogen from both fruit (especially seeds) and non‐fruit sources (mature leaves and bark in the case of minerals, young and mature leaves in the case of nitrogen). However, they obtained lipid and non‐structural carbohydrates mostly from fruit. Squirrels were selective in their utilization of tree species on a monthly basis, but this selectivity was not evident over a longer time period because individuals were constrained to use different phenological stages of tree species present within their territories. Large body size in this squirrel permits dietary flexibility and enables an overall generalist feeding strategy. Copyright © 1992, Wiley Blackwell. All rights reserved
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 21
页数:21
相关论文
共 76 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1956, NONPARAMETRIC STAT B
[2]   CHANGES IN CHEMICAL-COMPOSITION OF FOOD PARTS IN THE DIET OF COLOBUS MONKEYS [J].
BARANGA, D .
ECOLOGY, 1983, 64 (04) :668-673
[4]   HEMANALYSIS OF TANNINS - CONCEPT OF RELATIVE ASTRINGENCY [J].
BATESMIT.EC .
PHYTOCHEMISTRY, 1973, 12 (04) :907-912
[5]   NUTRITIONAL ECOLOGY OF MICROTINE RODENTS - DIGESTIBILITY OF FORAGE [J].
BATZLI, GO ;
COLE, FR .
JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY, 1979, 60 (04) :740-750
[6]   HERBIVORE OPTIMAL FORAGING - A COMPARATIVE TEST OF 3 MODELS [J].
BELOVSKY, GE .
AMERICAN NATURALIST, 1984, 124 (01) :97-115
[7]   FOOD PLANT-SELECTION BY A GENERALIST HERBIVORE - THE MOOSE [J].
BELOVSKY, GE .
ECOLOGY, 1981, 62 (04) :1020-1030
[8]   PLANT TANNINS AND INSECT HERBIVORES - AN APPRAISAL [J].
BERNAYS, EA .
ECOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY, 1981, 6 (04) :353-360
[9]   SEXUAL AND SITE DIFFERENCES IN CALCIUM CONSUMPTION BY THE MALABAR GIANT SQUIRREL RATUFA-INDICA [J].
BORGES, RM .
OECOLOGIA, 1990, 85 (01) :80-86
[10]  
Borges RM, 1989, THESIS U MIAMI