Abstract

Molting and breeding cycles are high-energetic costs events, and usually synchronized and temporally well defined in tropical avian communities. However, in degraded and/or undergoing restoration areas, environmental stresses, such as forest fragmentation and restriction of food resources, could locally change these patterns. This study aims to analyze molting and breeding in a bird assembly in an undergoing re-vegetation area in the Atlantic Forest of southeastern Brazil. By mist netting, we searched for evidence of molting of fight feathers and presence of brood patch in captured birds. We also recorded three environmental variables (temperature, rainfall, and photoperiod) to test whether they affect those events. We sampled 85 individuals from 36 species. The breeding cycle started in July and peaked in November and December. The molting period was between July and April of the next year and peaked in January and February. Molting and breeding events were related to temperature. The overlap between these events was of 11% (n = 9). Our data suggest that molt and breeding times are in accordance to other studies where the climate is more seasonal, yet more studies are necessary to investigate those biological cycles and their possible alterations due to environmental degradation.

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