First observations of geophagy for two neotropical passerines species

Autores

  • Guilherme Willrich Plaza Caldas da Imperatriz Resort & Spa
  • Fernando Maciel Brüggemann

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21726/abc.v13i1.2969

Resumo

Geophagy is the consumption of soil, clay or sediments by animal species. In birds, this behaviour was documented to only 2% of the world’s avifauna and several bird families lack evidence of geophagy. Here we present the first report of geophagy for the Parulidae family and only the fourth for Thraupidae, related to the species Tropical Parula (Setophaga pitiayumi) and Faw-breasted Tanager (Pipraeidea melanonota), respectively. We speculate that the observed behaviour could be related to mechanical digestion, protection against toxic food compounds or even mineral supplementation.

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Publicado

2026-04-02

Como Citar

Willrich, G., & Maciel Brüggemann, F. (2026). First observations of geophagy for two neotropical passerines species. Acta Biológica Catarinense, 13(1), 9–13. https://doi.org/10.21726/abc.v13i1.2969