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Diet of the Silvery-cheeked Hornbill Bycanistes brevis during the breeding season in the East Usambara Mountains,Tanzania
Authors:Norbert J Cordeiro  Joshua T Campbell  Henry J Ndangalasi
Institution:1. Department of Biological, Chemical, and Physical Sciences, Roosevelt University, Chicago, Illinois, USA;2. Life Sciences, Science and Education, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, Illinois, USA;3. Department of Botany, University of Dar es Salaam, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
Abstract:The breeding season diet and nesting characteristics of the Silvery-cheeked Hornbill Bycanistes brevis are poorly known. To further understand these aspects of the breeding biology of this hornbill species, 14 nests were studied in and around Amani Nature Reserve located in the East Usambara Mountains, Tanzania. Nesting tree species were identified and the diet composition of nesting hornbills was evaluated between July and November 2001. The ejecta from each nest were collected, inventoried, identified (as completely as possible) and enumerated. Food items were categorised as plant, vertebrate or invertebrate. Plants, represented largely by fruits, were the dominant food type (n = 861), followed by invertebrates (n = 306; mainly millipedes and beetles), and vertebrates (n = 15; mainly smaller birds and chameleons). A comparison of results from the current study to other nesting observations made approximately seven decades earlier in the same area suggest that (1) the invasive tree species Maesopsis eminii, which was the most common food type consumed (n = 4 539 seeds), has become a favoured new food source in the breeding season, and (2) the breeding season appears to have shifted to an earlier period, potentially due to the fruiting phenology and abundance of Maesopsis eminii.
Keywords:breeding  Eastern Arc  fruit  hornbill  invasive species  Maesopsis eminii
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