Ábrahám Levente (szerk.): Válogatott tanulmányok IV. - Natura Somogyiensis 15. / Miscellanea 4. (Kaposvár, 2009)

Lánszki József - Sárdi Bertalan - Széles Gabriella: Falvakban és külterületi mezőgazdasági környezetben élő nyestek táplálkozási szokásai

236 Natura Somogyiensis Results Diet composition and trophic niche breadth of martens Plant material - especially fruits - formed the dominant component of the diet of stone martens in the studied summer-autumn period (mean, villages: 62.2%, farms 74.2%, Table 1). Of the fruits available, depending on the locality, pear, plum, cherry or sour­­cherry, grape or berry were consumed in the largest proportions. The composition of plant or animal food of stone martens living in villages and farms did not differ signifi­cantly (t10=l.22, P=0.255). Primary animal food type of martens living in villages (Table 2) was birds (42.1±4.70%, mean±SE), but besides this, proportion of small mammals consumed was also consider­able (32.5±3.90%). Primary animal food in farm environment consisted of small mam­mals (45.7±5.14%) and secondary foods were birds (27.0±6.00%). Between habitat types the distribution of taxonomically different food items was statistically significant (X24=23.23, PO.OOl), but consumption (%B) of each food categories depending on habitat types did not differ significantly (t10=0.41-2.00, P=0.073-0.693) On the basis of hierarchical cluster analysis (Fig. 2), three groups were separated. Those locations (from top to bottom on the dendogram) where bird consumption was high (min.-max. 47.3-67.2%) fell into one group, those where consumption of small mammals was in high ratios (35.7-57.0%) into the second one, and those where con­sumption of domestic food was considerable (37.8% and 47.9%) fell into the third group. The samples of the martens contained summarized 91 different food taxa (Table 2, Appendix 1): 12 small mammals, 1 ungulate, 7 domestic animals (+ pet food), 4 birds, 2 reptiles, 1 amphibian, 3 fish, 33 invertebrates, 13 fruit, 11 seed taxa and 3 other plant material. Trophic niche for the diet composition (%B) of the martens living in villages and farm environments was relatively narrow (BA, 0.25±0.019 and 0.23±0.027, respec­tively), and between the two habitat types did not differ significantly (t10=0.55, P=0.597). Highest value was measured in Somogysimonyi (BA=0.32) and the lowest one in Nagyszakácsi (BA = 0.14). Relative distance 0 5 10 15 20 25 +................+-................+..................+................+.................+ Fig. 2: Dendogram of diet similarity of stone martens, calculated with hierarchical cluster analysis on the basis of estimated percentage biomass (%B) data Cluster method: between-groups linkage; interval of measure: Pearson correlation. For numbers of each loca­­tions see Fig. 1. Short horizontal lines (—) are separate clusters.

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