Digestive System Trade-offs and Adaptations of Frugivorous Passerine Birds
- 1 November 1990
- journal article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in Physiological Zoology
- Vol. 63 (6) , 1248-1270
- https://doi.org/10.1086/physzool.63.6.30152643
Abstract
Researchers have historically assumed that short food retention time is a typical trait of frugivorous birds, and our data support this. Because absorptive efficiency is directly related to retention time and absorption rate, we predicted that either rates of nutrient absorption would be higher in frugivores than other birds to compensate for short retention or that absorptive efficiencies would be lower. In the fourpasserine species that we studied, the more frugivorous species had higher intestinal glucose (but notproline) transport activity than the more insectivorous and carnivorous species and higher intestinal sucrase activity. But compared with those of chickens and hummingbirds, small intestines of frugivorous passerines (four species) did not have high rates of glucose and proline uptake in vitro. In accordance with our prediction, in vivo digestive efciency of radiolabeled glucose was 92% in frugivorous cedar waxwings (88% for fructose) and 73% in fruit-eating American robins, less than the expected value near 100%. Digestive effciency for sucrose was even less (62% in cedar waxwings, 0% in American robins). Thus, it appears that the anatomy and physiology of fruit eaters result in less than complete digestion and absorption of sugars. Presumably there is some compensating advantage to short digesta retention thatperhaps increases net rate of energy intake. It may lie in the ability of frugivores to process large amounts of fruitper unit time in spite of the constraint gut volume might place on fruit intake.Keywords
This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: