THE IMPORTANCE OF EUCALYPT NECTAR IN THE DIET OF LARGE HONEYEATERS
Posted: |
22/06/2021 |
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Author(s): |
Anthony S. J. Saunders, Hugh Jones, Shelley Burgin |
In a study comparing the densities of Noisy Friarbirds
Philemon corniculatus, Red Wattlebirds
Anthochaera
carunculata and flowering eucalypts, between 1992 and 1996 in central eastern New South Wales, the flowering
of trees was found to be a very highly significant explanatory variable accounting for changes In honeyea1er
numbers at both regional and local scales. Correlations between counts of honeyeaters and flowering trees and
the proportion of time spent in aggression and foraging at flowering trees were significant. At sites on the western
slopes, flowering trees are more significant in determining the density of these two honeyeaters than sites on
the coast and tablelands. While eucalypt nectar is important at some sites and for some seasons, it is suggested
that other factors, sucn as patch size and other foods, may determine the whereabouts of these two honeyeaters.
The correlations suggest that both honeyeaters seek higher yielding flowering patches, and that defence of nectar
sources is more worthwhile when resources are more concentrated and localized. This study indicates that remnant
forests on the western slopes provide important foraging habitat in winter and spring, particularly for
P. corniculatus.
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