THE FEEDING HABITS OF THE WHITEWINGED BLACK TERN ON LAKE KARIBA
- 1 September 1973
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Ostrich
- Vol. 44 (3-4) , 149-153
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00306525.1973.9639154
Abstract
Bego, G. W. 1973. The feeding habits of the Whitewinged Black Tern on Lake Kariba. Ostrich 44: 149–153. The stomach contents of 33 Whitewinged Black Terns were examined over the period 26 August 1971 to 6 January 1972. The most important single food item was the sardine, Limnothrissa miodon. This sheds new light on the habits of this fish. The terns fed primarily during calm weather. Sardines are caught by hovering and diving. Fishes of the genera Haplochromis and Synodonlis, also appeared in the stomach contents. Terns taken from marginal localities appear not to feed on fish. Of the insects eaten Odonata are the most important aquatic source of food, while many terrestrial insects are eaten (Orthoptera, Hemiptera, Coleoptera, Isoptera). Such insects could have been found drifting on mats of Salvinia on which the terns rest, otherwise insects are either hawked or skimmed from the surface of the water.Keywords
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