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1 April 2009 Sugar Preferences and Digestion by Cape White-Eyes, Zosterops virens, Fed Artificial Fruit Diets
A.E. Wellmann, C.T. Downs
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Abstract

Sugar preferences and digestion of sugars in artificial fruit of different sugar types and concentrations were investigated in a South African facultative frugivore, the Cape white-eye (Zosterops virens). We studied sugar preferences, daily food and energy intake, and digestive efficiencies and transit times with birds that were fed artificial fruit diets comprising 6.6, 12.4 and 22% glucose and sucrose, respectively. Digestive transit rates of birds fed artificial fruit diets were faster for glucose compared with sucrose diets, irrespective of concentration. Birds showed increased food intake with decreasing glucose concentration, but showed no significant differences in these intake amounts with differing sucrose concentrations. Apparent assimilation efficiencies were lower than most nectar studies, and were generally higher for glucose fruit (79.3–85.6%) compared with sucrose fruit (69.0–78.4%). In choice tests, birds preferred sucrose over glucose of equivalent weight, irrespective of concentration. It appears likely that the Cape white-eye has high levels of sucrase activity, although further study is needed to verify this.

A.E. Wellmann and C.T. Downs "Sugar Preferences and Digestion by Cape White-Eyes, Zosterops virens, Fed Artificial Fruit Diets," African Zoology 44(1), 106-116, (1 April 2009). https://doi.org/10.3377/004.044.0110
Received: 4 September 2008; Accepted: 1 February 2009; Published: 1 April 2009
KEYWORDS
Cape white-eye
digestion
frugivory
fruit composition
preference
sugar
Zosterops virens
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