Effects of fruit novelty on feeding preference in four globally invasive frugivorous birds
Data files
Jul 10, 2025 version files 157.61 KB
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Biol.Inv_Case.etal_2024_Dryad.csv
155.49 KB
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README.md
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Abstract
Invasive fruit-eating animals (hereafter frugivores) can form novel mutualisms with fruiting plants and alter seed dispersal. Plant-frugivore interactions are often linked to frugivore preference for certain fruit traits, but for invasive frugivores, it is uncertain if novelty—whether or not a fruit is familiar—impacts foraging decisions. We experimentally tested fruit preferences of the four most abundant and frugivorous bird species on O‘ahu, a Hawaiian Island, all of which are globally invasive songbirds. With captive wild birds, we tested for preference in relation to fruit size, color, nutrients, and bird sex. We also tested how novelty of fruits affected trait-based preferences, with fruits from plant species either established in the wild or novel. Using arrays that offered multiple fruit species, we conducted 252 trials with 111 plant species, 59.5% of which were considered novel. From all fruits tested, three bird species preferred smaller fruits, and color preferences varied among bird species. Novelty of fruits influenced preference in three ways. First, birds preferred fruits from plants that were established in the wild over novel fruits. Second, repeated exposure to novel fruits increased the probability of interactions. Third, preferred novel fruits were smaller and redder than preferred fruits from established plants. Finally, bird sex and fruit nutrient content did not affect preference. Together, these results suggest that preference for fruit traits varies among invasive bird species and can be flexible when fruits are novel to birds, increasing the likelihood of novel mutualisms and making it increasingly difficult to predict invasion impacts.
Dataset DOI: 10.5061/dryad.zs7h44jn3
Files and variables
File: Biol.Inv_Case.etal_2024_Dryad.csv
Variables
- TRIAL ID: Experimental trial
- BIRD SPP: Bird species (four-letter code based on common name). See Table 3 of manuscript for full bird species names
- BIRD ID: Bird individual
- BIRD SEX: Bird sex (F=Female, M=Male)
- DATE: Trial date
- PLANT SPP: Plant species written as six-letter codes (first three letters of genus and first three letters of species, UNK and XXX=unknown) for plant species used in experiments. See Table 5 in manuscript for full plant species names
- EXPOSURE: Exposure (the number of trials in which an individual bird had been offered fruit from a given plant species (e.g., exposure of 1 is the first time a fruit was offered to a bird species, while an exposure of 6 is the sixth time a fruit was offered to a bird species)
- INTERACTION: Events where at least one fruit was consumed (in part or whole) or removed from its toothpick) are classified as 1. Events where no interactions occurred are classified as 0.
- NOVELTY: Species were considered established (1) if they were native or nonnative species with established wild populations in Hawaiian forests. Plant species were considered novel (0) if they were occurring as a single individual or group of individuals within horticultural collections.
- F.LENGTH: Fruit length (mm), estimate for plant species
- F.WIDTH: Fruit width (mm), estimate for plant species
- F.HEIGHT: Fruit height (mm), estimate for plant species
- S.LENGTH: Seed length (mm), estimate for plant species
- S.WIDTH: Seed width (mm), estimate for plant species
- S.HEIGHT: Seed height (mm), estimate for plant species
- SEED.NUM: Seed number, estimate for plant species
- COLOR: Peak spectral reflectance (nm), estimate for plant species
- LIPID: Lipid content (%), estimate for plant species
- PROTEIN: Protein content (%), estimate for plant species
- CARB: Carbohydrate content (%), estimate for plant species
