Abstract

I studied Brotogeris chiriri abundance and foraging activity at a dry forest of the Urucum mountains in western Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil, to evaluate their relationships with food resource production. Brotogeris chiriri abundance sharply increased during the early wet season (mainly October 2001) when it mostly foraged for fleshy fruits. At that time Protium heptaphyllum, one of the most common tree species, bore a large crop of fruits, the arils of which were extensively consumed by B. chiriri. Conversely, only a few parakeets were recorded foraging from the late wet to the late dry season, when dry fruit production predominated. The monthly pattern of parakeet abundance paralleled both its monthly pattern of foraging activity and fleshy fruit availability. Moreover, the variations in foraging activity were highly correlated to fleshy fruit production. Thus, data presented here evidenced the effect of both fruiting pulses and a common tree species that produced a large and ephemeral fruit crop, on the dynamic of a small and mobile canopy forager at a primary dry forest.

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