Seed preferences by birds: Effects of the design of feeding-preference experiments

We analysed the effects of the design of feeding-preference experiments in a study of seed selection by Rufous-collared Sparrows Zonotrichia capensis. We presented eight seed options in multiple- and simple-offer experiments. Statistical results indicated that in multiple-offer tests there were thre...

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Autores principales: Cueto, V.R., Marone, L., De Casenave, J.L.
Formato: JOUR
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09088857_v32_n3_p275_Cueto
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spelling todo:paper_09088857_v32_n3_p275_Cueto2023-10-03T15:44:34Z Seed preferences by birds: Effects of the design of feeding-preference experiments Cueto, V.R. Marone, L. De Casenave, J.L. avifauna experimental design food preference seed Aves Passeridae Vertebrata Zonotrichia capensis Zonotrichia capensis We analysed the effects of the design of feeding-preference experiments in a study of seed selection by Rufous-collared Sparrows Zonotrichia capensis. We presented eight seed options in multiple- and simple-offer experiments. Statistical results indicated that in multiple-offer tests there were three preferred, and two avoided seed species. The other three species could not be assigned to any of those groups. In contrast, results of simple-offer tests showed that all seed species were preferred, except the two avoided ones. Using a graphical combination of the results of both approaches, we obtained an easily interpretable assessment of the seed preferences of Rufous-collared Sparrows. In the graph space, seed species make up three groups: preferred, avoided, and less-preferred (i.e., heavily consumed in simple-offer trials, but avoided or consumed to a lesser extent in multiple-offer trials). With the combination of both protocols we avoided the biases caused by using one experimental design alone and could detect secondary-preferred food items. This seems crucial when the bird under study is plastic in its feeding preferences. Fil:Cueto, V.R. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. Fil:De Casenave, J.L. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09088857_v32_n3_p275_Cueto
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic avifauna
experimental design
food preference
seed
Aves
Passeridae
Vertebrata
Zonotrichia capensis
Zonotrichia capensis
spellingShingle avifauna
experimental design
food preference
seed
Aves
Passeridae
Vertebrata
Zonotrichia capensis
Zonotrichia capensis
Cueto, V.R.
Marone, L.
De Casenave, J.L.
Seed preferences by birds: Effects of the design of feeding-preference experiments
topic_facet avifauna
experimental design
food preference
seed
Aves
Passeridae
Vertebrata
Zonotrichia capensis
Zonotrichia capensis
description We analysed the effects of the design of feeding-preference experiments in a study of seed selection by Rufous-collared Sparrows Zonotrichia capensis. We presented eight seed options in multiple- and simple-offer experiments. Statistical results indicated that in multiple-offer tests there were three preferred, and two avoided seed species. The other three species could not be assigned to any of those groups. In contrast, results of simple-offer tests showed that all seed species were preferred, except the two avoided ones. Using a graphical combination of the results of both approaches, we obtained an easily interpretable assessment of the seed preferences of Rufous-collared Sparrows. In the graph space, seed species make up three groups: preferred, avoided, and less-preferred (i.e., heavily consumed in simple-offer trials, but avoided or consumed to a lesser extent in multiple-offer trials). With the combination of both protocols we avoided the biases caused by using one experimental design alone and could detect secondary-preferred food items. This seems crucial when the bird under study is plastic in its feeding preferences.
format JOUR
author Cueto, V.R.
Marone, L.
De Casenave, J.L.
author_facet Cueto, V.R.
Marone, L.
De Casenave, J.L.
author_sort Cueto, V.R.
title Seed preferences by birds: Effects of the design of feeding-preference experiments
title_short Seed preferences by birds: Effects of the design of feeding-preference experiments
title_full Seed preferences by birds: Effects of the design of feeding-preference experiments
title_fullStr Seed preferences by birds: Effects of the design of feeding-preference experiments
title_full_unstemmed Seed preferences by birds: Effects of the design of feeding-preference experiments
title_sort seed preferences by birds: effects of the design of feeding-preference experiments
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_09088857_v32_n3_p275_Cueto
work_keys_str_mv AT cuetovr seedpreferencesbybirdseffectsofthedesignoffeedingpreferenceexperiments
AT maronel seedpreferencesbybirdseffectsofthedesignoffeedingpreferenceexperiments
AT decasenavejl seedpreferencesbybirdseffectsofthedesignoffeedingpreferenceexperiments
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