Nectar concentration affects sugar preferences in two Australian honeyeaters and a lorikeet

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dc.contributor.author Fleming, Patricia A.
dc.contributor.author Xie, S.
dc.contributor.author Napier, Kathryn R.
dc.contributor.author McWhorter, Todd J.
dc.contributor.author Nicolson, Sue W.
dc.date.accessioned 2009-02-17T11:50:59Z
dc.date.available 2009-02-17T11:50:59Z
dc.date.issued 2008
dc.description.abstract Understanding avian diet preferences reveals a great deal about the birds' digestive physiology and relationships with food plants, and can make a valuable contribution towards directing physiological and ecological research. Importantly, diet preferences are likely to reflect physiological constraints and therefore mechanisms of digestion. We assessed the interaction between diet concentration and sugar-type preferences of three Australian nectarivorous bird species. Each individual bird was offered paired energetically-equivalent diets: a sucrose solution and hexose (1 : 1 mixture of glucose : fructose) solution over a range of diet concentrations from 0•075 to 2 mol L−1 Sucrose Equivalents (SE). Similar patterns were found for all three species. Intake on the most dilute diets was insufficient to maintain energy balance, suggesting that these birds faced physiological constraints on such diets. All three species demonstrated a preference for hexose over sucrose when offered dilute diets, and sucrose (or none) preference on more concentrated diets. The three species differed in terms of when this switch from hexose to sucrose preference took place. Rainbow lorikeets (Psittacidae, c. 135 g body mass) demonstrated hexose preference for diets up to and including 0•75 mol L−1 SE; sucrose was preferred on 2 mol L−1 SE diets. Red wattlebirds (Meliphagidae, c. 105 g) showed hexose preference on only the most dilute (0•075 mol L−1 SE) diet, and sucrose preference on 1 and 2 mol L−1 SE diets. New Holland honeyeaters (Meliphagidae, c. 22 g) preferred hexose on 0•075 and 0•1 mol L−1 SE diets, and their selectivity for sucrose was not statistically significant. We suggest that the switch from hexose preference may be directly related to the digestive capacity of different taxa. Accumulating evidence suggests similar patterns of sugar preferences in various nectarivorous bird lineages. A switch from hexose preference on dilute diets to sucrose preference on concentrated diets has now been shown for hummingbirds, flowerpiercers, sunbirds, honeyeaters and lorikeets. Hexose preference on dilute diets suggests that reduced digesta retention time and low sugar concentration influences sucrose hydrolysis efficiency, whilst absorption rate of monosaccharides is less limiting. Sucrose preference on concentrated diets is more puzzling, but may reflect preference for diets with lower osmolality. Varying preferences suggest that the co-evolutionary relationships between birds and nectar sugar composition are likely to be similarly dynamic and situation dependent. en_US
dc.identifier.citation Fleming, PA, Xie, S, Napier, K, McWhorter, TJ & Nicolson, SW 2008, ‘Nectar concentration affects sugar preferences in two Australian honeyeaters and a lorikeet’, Functional Ecology, vol. 22, no. 4, pp. 599-605. en_US
dc.identifier.issn 0269-8463
dc.identifier.other 10.1111/j.1365-2435.2008.01401.x
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2263/8927
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Blackwell en_US
dc.relation.requires Adobe Acrobat Reader
dc.rights Blackwell. The definitive version is available at www.Blackwell-synergy.com. This article is embargoed by the publisher until August 2009. en_US
dc.subject Digestive constraint en_US
dc.subject Honeyeaters en_US
dc.subject Lorikeet en_US
dc.subject Nectar sugars en_US
dc.subject Plant-pollinator co-evolution en_US
dc.subject Sucrose hydrolysis en_US
dc.subject Wattlebirds en
dc.subject.lcsh Honeyeaters -- Australia en
dc.subject.lcsh Lories -- Food en
dc.subject.lcsh Digestion en
dc.subject.lcsh Kokako en
dc.title Nectar concentration affects sugar preferences in two Australian honeyeaters and a lorikeet en_US
dc.type Postprint Article en_US


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