Differentiating diverse diets: a novel approach to analyzing cafeteria
feeding trials
Abstract
Foraging decisions are essential for survival, thus investigation of
food preferences is a major goal in behavioral ecology. Cafeteria
trials, in which multiple options are displayed to foragers
simultaneously, can quantify these preferences. However, statistical
analyses of these data are problematic. The aim of this research is to
determine the efficacy of using Shannon Diversity
(Hs) and Evenness (J) to quantify diet
preferences and apply this approach to field data collected in a model
system. Shannon Diversity (Hs) provides a single
value to represent a forager’s diet, based on proportions of each food
type offered. Shannon Evenness (J’) assesses the relative
quantity of each food type consumed, and is an intuitive way to address
foraging preferences. Null models inspected how values of
Hs and J’ change with diet breadth. This
approach was tested for a cafeteria trial of two common chipmunks
[Eastern (Tamias striatus) and Least (Neotamias
minimus)] with five different seed types [Red (Acer rubrum)
and Sugar (A. saccharum) Maple, Balsam Fir (Abies
balsamea), Pin Cherry (Prunus pensylvanica), and Beaked Hazelnut
(Corylus cornuta)]. Hypothesis tests determined if observed
diets were statistically different from those predicted based on equal
preferences. Values of Hs increased with diet
breadth; although mean J’ was unaffected by diet breadth,
variability increased. Chipmunks displayed significant seed preferences:
Tamias preferred Sugar Maple whereas Neotamias preferred
Red Maple. Moreover, each species avoided the seed type preferred by the
other chipmunk. Null models indicate that Hs
accurately estimates real changes in diet breadth. The fact that
J’ did not significantly change with increasing diet breadth also
supports the utility of this approach to determine non-random diet
preferences. Use of diversity indices to quantify feeding choices can be
extended to other contexts (e.g., comparison of suites of foragers, and
altering feeding context by changing amounts of each resource offered).