Territoriality and changes in resource use by sunbirds at Leonotis leonurus (Labiatae)
- 31 March 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Oecologia
- Vol. 45 (1) , 109-116
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00346715
Abstract
Leonotis leonurus was studied with the aim of characterising nectar quality and quantity, and of monitoring the sunbirds' response to the resource. The flowers produced high quality nectar in low quantities. Nectar quality remained constant during the day and averaged 23.4% sucrose equivalents (an energy content of 3.8j/μl). Nectar production was highest during the morning when flow rates reached a peak of 3.3 μl/h. L. leonurus was visited by four species of sunbirds. In 1977 there were 7.8 visits/h to the flowers. The clump was defended by a single Olive Sunbird (Nectarinia olivacea) who defended the flowers intra- and interspecifically. On one day the territorial bird obtained approximately 57.1 kJ from the Leonotis flowers and expended 5.4 kJ on defence and 13.6 kJ overall while on the territory. Territorial behaviour and intruder pressure was a function of resource availability. When Leonotis nectar levels were high intruder pressure was intense and the territorial bird employed long chases as a defence behaviour. When nectar levels desreased intruder pressure was lower, the territorial bird chased less and employed vocalisations as a relatively inexpensive form of territorial behaviour. In 1978 there was an abundance of nectar sources in the study area due to the late onset of the dry season. Sunbirds were not territorial at Leonotis and visiting rates were lower than in 1977, averaging only 1.7 visits per hour. Instead the sunbirds concentrated on contemporaneously flowering plant species, particularly Halleria lucida.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Territorial responses to energy manipulations in the Anna hummingbirdOecologia, 1977
- Nonrandom Foraging by Sunbirds in a Patchy EnvironmentEcology, 1977
- Threshold Model of Feeding Territoriality and Test with a Hawaiian HoneycreeperScience, 1976
- A Model of Competition for Food. I. Frequency-Dependent ViabilitiesThe American Naturalist, 1976
- Economics of Feeding Territoriality in the Golden‐Winged SunbirdEcology, 1975
- Energy Intake and Expenditures in a Nectar-feeding SunbirdEcology, 1975
- A Preliminary Account of the Dune Communities at Pennington Park, Mtunzini, NatalBothalia, 1972
- Energetics of nectar extraction in a small, high altitude, tropical hummingbird,Selasphorus flammulaJournal of Comparative Physiology A, 1972
- Hummingbird Territoriality at a Tropical Flowering TreeThe Auk, 1970
- The Meanings of CompetitionThe American Naturalist, 1957