Artículos de revistas
DIET OF THE BROWN HOWLER MONKEY ALOUATTA-FUSCA IN A SEMI-DECIDUOUS FOREST FRAGMENT OF SOUTHEASTERN BRAZIL
Registro en:
Primates. Japan Monkey Centre, v. 35, n. 1, n. 25, n. 34, 1994.
0032-8332
WOS:A1994MU06800003
10.1007/BF02381483
Autor
CHIARELLO, AG
Institución
Resumen
The diet of a group of six brown howlers was studied weekly during 12 months in a reserve of 250 ha of secondary, mesophytic, semi-deciduous forest. The phenology of 186 trees of 72 species and 29 families was monitored simultaneously. Scan sampling was used to record the diet from dawn until dusk on a total of 60 days of observation, yielding 718 hr of animal-observer contact and 2,943 feeding scans. The diet was composed of leaves (73%), flowers (12%), and fruits (5%), from 68 identified plant species. Celtis iguanae, Cassia ferruginea, and Inga spp. were the main food sources, accounting for approximately 50% of the diet. Young leaves (59%) were preferred to mature leaves (31%), trees contributing 56% and lianas 41% of the leaf diet. The ingestion of young leaves was correlated to the availability of these items, however, the correlations were not significant for flowers and fruits. The diet was poorer in fruits and richer in young leaves of lianas in comparison to other howler monkey species studied, probably as a consequence of the liana abundance in this forest fragment. 35 1 25 34