Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dsjbd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T17:12:45.474Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Fig-eating by birds in a Malaysian lowland rain forest

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 July 2009

Frank Lambert
Affiliation:
Department of Zoology, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen AB9 2TN, Scotland

Abstract

Sixty bird species ate the figs of 29 Ficus taxa at a lowland forest site in Peninsular Malaysia. Although most bird-eaten figs were brightly coloured, four Ficus species produced dull-coloured ripe fruits. Whilst there was tremendous overlap in the sizes of figs eaten by different bird species, data presented show that the fig resource was partitioned by birds. Large birds were commoner visitors to large-fruited Ficus, but small birds tended to eat small figs. Within two avian genera, the Treron pigeons and Megalaima barbets, there was distinct partitioning of figs consumed according to fig size.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1989

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

LITERATURE CITED

August, P. V. 1981. Fig fruit consumption and seed dispersal by Artibeus jamaicensis in the Llanos of Venezuela. Biotropica 13:7076.Google Scholar
Breitwisch, R. 1983. Frugivores at a fruiting Ficus vine in a southern Cameroon tropical wet forest. Biotropica 15:125128.Google Scholar
Brockelman, W. Y. 1982. Observations of animals feeding in a strangler fig F. drupacea in South-east Thailand. Natural History Bulletin of the Siam Society 30:3344.Google Scholar
Campbell, B. & Lack, E. (eds). 1985. A dictionary of birds. T. and A. D. Poyser, Calton. 670 pp.Google Scholar
Chivers, D. J. (ed.). 1980. Malayan forest primates. Plenum Press, New York. 388 pp.Google Scholar
Coates-Estrada, R. & Estrada, A. 1986. Fruiting and frugivores at a strangling fig in the tropical rain forest of Los Tuxtlas, Mexico. Journal of Tropical Ecology 2:349357.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Corlett, R. T. 1984. The phenology of Ficus benjamina and Ficus microcarpa in Singapore. Journal Singapore National Academy of Science 13:13.Google Scholar
Corner, E. J. H. 1949. The Durian theory or the origin of the modern tree. Annals of Botany 13:317414.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Corner, E. J. H. 1965. Check list of Ficus in Asia and Australasia, with keys to identification. Gardens′ Bulletin Singapore 21:1186.Google Scholar
Fleming, T. H. 1979. Do tropical frugivores compete for food? American Zoologist 19:11571172.Google Scholar
Frith, C. B. & Frith, D. W. 1983. A systematic review of the hornbill genus Anthracoceros (Aves, Bucerotidae). Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 78:2971.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frost, P. 1980. Fruit-frugivore interactions in a South African coastal dune forest. Proceedings XVII International Ornithological Congress Berlin.Google Scholar
Gautier-Hion, A., Duplantier, J. -M., Quiris, R., Feer, F., Sourd, C., Decoux, J. -P., Du Bost, G., Emmons, L., Erard, C., Hecketsweiler, P., Moungazi, A., Roussilhon, C. & Thiollay, J. M. 1985. Fruit characters as a basis of fruit choice and seed disposal in a tropical forest vertebrate community. Oecologia 65:324337.Google Scholar
Herrera, C. M. 1981. Are tropical fruits more rewarding to dispersers than temperate ones? American Naturalist 118:896907.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Janson, C. H. 1983. Adaptation of fruit morphology to dispersal agents in a tropical forest. Science 219:187189.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Janzen, D. H. 1980. How to be a fig. Annual Review Ecology & Systematics 10:1351.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johns, A. D. 1983. Ecological effects of selective logging in a West Malaysian rain forest. Unpublished PhD thesis, Cambridge University.Google Scholar
Jordano, P. 1983. Fig-seed predation and dispersal by birds. Biotropica 15:3841.Google Scholar
Kantak, G. E. 1979. Observation on some fruit eating birds in Mexico. Auk 96:183186.Google Scholar
King, B., Woodcock, M. & Dickinson, E. C. 1975. A field guide to the birds of South-east Asia. Collins, London. 480 pp.Google Scholar
Knight, R. S. & Siegfried, W. R. 1983. Inter-relationships between type, size and colour of fruits and dispersal in Southern African trees. Oecologia 56:405512.Google Scholar
Lambert, F. R. 1987. Fig-eating and seed dispersal by birds in a Malaysian lowland rain forest. Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Aberdeen.Google Scholar
Lambert, F. R. in press. Pigeons as seed predators and dispersers of figs in a Malaysian lowland forest. Ibis.Google Scholar
Leighton, M. 1982. Fruit resources and patterns of feeding, spacing and grouping among sympatric Bornean hornbills (Bucerotidae). Unpublished PhD thesis, University of California, Davis.Google Scholar
Leighton, M. in press. Phenological patterns in Asian rain forest communities. Proceedings of the International Workshop on Reproductive Ecology of Tropical Forest Plants, UNESCO(MAB), IUBS. Bangi, Malaysia 1987.Google Scholar
Leighton, M. & Leighton, D. R. 1983. Vertebrate responses to fruiting seasonality within a Bornean rain forest. Pp. 181&196 in Sutton, S. L., Whitmore, T. C. & Chadwick, A. C.Tropical rain forests: ecology and management. Blackwell Scientific Publications, Oxford.Google Scholar
McClure, H. E. 1966. Flowering, fruiting and animals in the canopy of a tropical rain forest. Malayan Forester 24:182203.Google Scholar
Medway, Lord. 1972. Phenology of a tropical rainforest in Malaya. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society London 4:117146.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Medway, Lord & Wells, D. R. 1971. Diversity and density of birds and mammals at Kuala Lompat, Pahang. Malayan Nature Journal 4:238247.Google Scholar
Morton, E. S. 1973. On the evolutionary advantages and disadvantages of fruit-eating in tropical birds. American Naturalist 107:822.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ng, F. S. P. (ed.). 1978. Tree flora of Malaya. Vol. 3. Longman, Kuala Lumpur. 339 pp.Google Scholar
Pijl, L. Van Der 1969. Principles of dispersal in higher plants. Springer-Verlag, New York. 154 pp.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pratt, T. K. 1983. Seed dispersal in a montane forest in Papua New Guinea. Unpublished PhD thesis, Rutgers University, New Jersey.Google Scholar
Pratt, T. K. & Stiles, E. W. 1985. The influence of fruit size and structure on composition of frugivore assemblages in New Guinea. Biotropica 17:314372.Google Scholar
Raemaekers, J. J., Aldrich-Blake, F. P. G. & Payne, J. B. 1980. The forest. Pp. 2961 in Chivers, D. J. (ed.). Malayan forest primates. Plenum Press, New York.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ridley, H. N. 1930. The dispersal of plants throughout the world. L. Reeve & Co., Kent, England. 744 pp.Google Scholar
Scott, P. E. & Martin, R. F. 1984. Avian consumers of Bursera, Ficus and Ehretia fruits in Yucatan. Biotropica 16:319323.Google Scholar
Snow, B. K. & Snow, D. W. 1971. The feeding ecology of tanagers and honey creepers in Trinidad. Auk 291322.Google Scholar
Snow, D. W. 1980. Regional differences between tropical floras and the evolution of frugivory. Proceedings XVII International Ornithological Congress. Pp. 11921198.Google Scholar
Terborgh, J. 1986. Keystone plant resources in the tropical forest. In Soule, M. E. (ed.). Conservation biology, the science of scarcity and diversity. Sinauer Associates Inc., Massachussets. 584 pp.Google Scholar
Terborgh, J. & Diamond, J. M. 1970. Niche overlap in feeding assemblages of New Guinea birds. Wilson Bulletin 82:2952.Google Scholar
Turcek, F. J. 1963. Colour preferences in fruit and seed-eating birds. Proceedings XIII International Ornithological Congress 1962. Ithaca, New York, Pp. 285–92.Google Scholar
Wells, D. R. 1975. Bird report: 1972 and 1973. Malayan Nature Journal 28:186213.Google Scholar
Wells, D. R. 1982. Bird report: 1974 and 1975. Malayan Nature Journal 36:6185.Google Scholar
Wheelwright, N. T., Haber, W. A., Murray, K. G. & Guindon, C. 1984. Tropical fruit eating birds and their food plants: a survey of a Costa Rican lower montane forest. Biotropica 16:173192.Google Scholar
White, S. C. 1974. Ecological aspects of growth and nutrition in tropical forest fruit eating birds. published PhD thesis, University of Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Willson, M. F. & Thompson, J. N. 1982. Phenology and ecology of color in bird dispersed fruits or why some fruits are red when they are ‘green’. Canadian Journal of Botany 60:701713.Google Scholar