Journal article

Diet of the Chilean flamingo Phoenicopterus chilensis (Phoenicopteriformes: Phoenicopteridae) in a coastal wetland in Chiloe, southern Chile


Authors listTobar, Claudio N.; Rau, Jaime R.; Fuentes, Norka; Gantz, Alberto; Suazo, Cristian G.; Cursach, Jaime A.; Santibanez, Alexis; Perez-Schultheiss, Jorge

Publication year2014

JournalRevista Chilena de Historia Natural

Volume number87

ISSN0716-078X

eISSN0717-6317

Open access statusGold

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1186/s40693-014-0015-1

PublisherBioMed Central


Abstract

Background: The geographical distribution of the Chilean flamingo (Phoenicopterus chilensis) includes the southern-central Neotropics. Despite its wide distribution, currently there is no dietary information on its southern distribution range. From June to September 2011, we quantified the diet and prey availability of the Chilean flamingo in the marine wetland of Caulin (41 degrees 48' S, 73 degrees 37' W), southern Chile.

Results: The prey availability related to both plankton and benthos were four species of copepods, four polychaetes, one foraminifera, and two amphipods. The diet of the Chilean flamingo was composed of foraminifera (Ammonia beccarii), copepods (Harpacticus sp.) and polychaetes. The most abundant prey items from feces of flamingos were Ammonia beccarii and Harpacticus sp. The diameter of A. beccarii consumed by flamingos ranged between 400 and 900 mu m, while its width varied between 100 and 300 mu m. The width of Harpacticus sp. consumed ranged between 160 and 260 mu m. The similarity between flamingo diet and prey availability was 0.553. The diversity of prey organisms in the benthos was higher than that observed from plankton and feces of birds. A. beccarii was preferred over other prey consumed by flamingos. This preference is not related to the size of Harpacticus sp. but to their ability to swim and escape from flamingos.

Conclusions: The dietary similarity of the Chilean flamingo versus the availability of prey in the environment (plankton and benthos) was 55%, indicating that the Chilean flamingo is a partially selective predator.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleTobar, C., Rau, J., Fuentes, N., Gantz, A., Suazo, C., Cursach, J., et al. (2014) Diet of the Chilean flamingo Phoenicopterus chilensis (Phoenicopteriformes: Phoenicopteridae) in a coastal wetland in Chiloe, southern Chile, Revista Chilena de Historia Natural, 87, Article 15. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40693-014-0015-1

APA Citation styleTobar, C., Rau, J., Fuentes, N., Gantz, A., Suazo, C., Cursach, J., Santibanez, A., & Perez-Schultheiss, J. (2014). Diet of the Chilean flamingo Phoenicopterus chilensis (Phoenicopteriformes: Phoenicopteridae) in a coastal wetland in Chiloe, southern Chile. Revista Chilena de Historia Natural. 87, Article 15. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40693-014-0015-1



Keywords


ALTIPLANOANDESArgentinaAVAILABILITY DATACopepodsDiet selectivityLAGUNAPOZUELOSTrophic ecology

Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 10:23