Abstract

The diets of sympatric species of opossums coexisting in small (<10 ha) Atlantic Forest fragments were studied at Poço das Antas Biological Reserve, southeastern Brazil. Food items consumed by Caluromys philander and Didelphis aurita were investigated through the analysis of faecal contents, and compared with the diet of Micoureus demerarae analysed in a previous study. The major diet components for all three species were arthropods and fruits, with a high richness of items of both feeding categories; feathers were also found in the diet of D. aurita. The most frequent insect orders overall were Hymenoptera and Coleoptera, and most seeds were from plants of secondary vegetation such as Cecropia and Piper. The diets showed little variation along time and space for all three species. Diets were also similar among species, except for a larger consumption of Arachnida and Diplopoda and a smaller consumption of Lepidoptera by D. aurita when compared to M. demerarae. Diversity of food items was lower for C. philander when compared with either other species. There was a high feeding niche overlap between species, suggesting that differentiation in diet composition would not be enough to allow coexistence of the three species in small fragments. Coexistence may rather be allowed by vertical segregation and/or by differences in prey size.

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