Abstract

Many temperate passerine bird species switch from diets of mostly invertebrates in the spring and summer to diets that include fruit and seeds in the fall and winter. However, relatively few studies have quantified diet composition or the extent of seasonal shifts during the non-breeding period, particularly among species and across communities with both residents and migrants. We measured carbon and nitrogen stable isotope values in food items (fruits, C3 and C4 seeds, and insects from various trophic levels and plant communities) and in multiple tissues (feathers and plasma/whole blood) from 11 species of songbirds wintering in the southeastern U.S. We combined these diet and tissue values with empirically derived discrimination factors and used concentration-dependent mixing models to quantify seasonal diet shifts. We also validated mixing model results with data from fecal samples. Diets in this bird community, as delineated N and C isotopic space, diverged in the fall and winter relative to the summer as consumption of fruits and seeds increased. Across this songbird community, estimated contributions of fruit to plasma/whole blood increased from 16.2 ± 7.5% in the fall (mean ± SD; range: 4–26%) to 21.7 ± 10.3% (range: 9–37%) in the winter, while contributions of seeds increased from 29.4 ± 2.6% (range: 28–32%) in the fall to 36.6 ± 4.8% (range: 32–42%) in the winter. Fecal data showed qualitatively similar trends to mixing models, but consistently estimated higher contributions of fruit. Our work indicates that fruits and seeds constitute substantial sources of sustenance for non-breeding songbirds, there is considerable separation of resource use among species in the fall and winter, and fecal estimates of contributions to songbird tissues should be interpreted cautiously.

Highlights

  • Animal diets are constrained by the availability of different food items, so many animals seasonally shift their diets as resource availability changes [1,2,3]

  • Our results demonstrate a great deal of flexibility in resource use by our focal songbird community, which add to the complexity of describing seasonal diet shifts

  • We used a stable isotope analysis of tissues and a range of diet items to document a notable reliance on non-arthropod resources by a mixed migrant and resident songbird community during the non-breeding season

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Summary

Introduction

Animal diets are constrained by the availability of different food items, so many animals seasonally shift their diets as resource availability changes [1,2,3]. A relatively well-established example of a highly predictable diet shift is the seasonal transition by many species of passerine birds in temperate regions from invertebrate prey in the spring and summer to alternate resources (e.g., fruits and seeds) in the fall and winter [12,13,14]. This shift is likely driven by reduced biomass of invertebrates during fall and winter and a concurrent increase in availability of fruits and seeds [15,16,17], which are generally conspicuous, energy rich, and “captured” [14,18,19]. Prior work has made considerable progress in characterizing networks of bird–plant interactions and other community-level patterns of frugivory involving songbirds

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