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Featured researches published by James D. Gilardi.


The Condor | 1998

Patterns of activity, flocking, and habitat use in parrots of the Peruvian Amazon

James D. Gilardi; Charles A. Munn

We explored patterns of flight activity, flocking, and habitat use in a diverse community of parrots in an Amazonian lowland forest. Parrots were most active just after sunrise with a second peak of flight activity following a mid-day lull. Brotogeris spp. were exceptional, being most active in the early afternoon. Among the nine genera studied, we observed marked differences in where the birds flew relative to the canopy. Body size was a poor predictor of flight height, although it was strongly and inversely correlated with flock size. Most parrot species flew in groups of one to four individuals, suggesting that mated pairs are stable and that family groups remain together post-fledging. Flocks were exclusively monospecific except when the birds were foraging in trees or eating soil at clay licks. These forest-dwelling parrots did not show dramatic increases in flock size in the evening, reflecting the lack of communal and multispecies roosting observed in other parrots. Generally, the large- and mid-sized species of parrots were associated with high-ground forest, whereas smaller species favored transitional forest. Because daily ranging patterns for these parrots potentially include all habitats, these patterns of habitat use suggest selection for subtle differences among forest types. As expected, smaller species were less detectable at a distance than large species. Comparisons of size and detectability indicate that macaws can be reliably counted to a distance of 300 m, but 100 m may be more appropriate for the smaller and low-flying genera. In sum, we found that observing parrots from the canopy is a useful method for quantifying parrot activities in a closed-canopy system, and that these forest-dwelling parrots are markedly less social than their counterparts on islands and in more open habitats. Patterns of flight behavior, habitat preferences, and the body size to flock size relationship invite further studies on the roles of predation and resource availability in the structuring of parrot communities.


Journal of Wildlife Diseases | 1995

A SURVEY FOR SELECTED VIRAL, CHLAMYDIAL, AND PARASITIC DISEASES IN WILD DUSKY-HEADED PARAKEETS (ARATINGA WEDDELLII) AND TUI PARAKEETS (BROTOGERIS SANCTITHOMAE) IN PERU

Kirsten V. K. Gilardi; Linda J. Lowenstine; James D. Gilardi; Charles A. Munn

Thirty-eight free-ranging dusky-headed parakeets (Aratinga weddellii) and 13 tui parakeets (Brotogeris sanctithomae) were caught and released in Parque Nacional del Manu in southeastern Peru from 19 July to 5 August 1993. Blood and fecal samples were collected and sera were evaluated for titers to Pachecos disease herpesvirus, psittacine polyomavirus, paramyxovirus-1, and Chlamydia psittaci. Fecal samples were examined for evidence of ascarid or coccidial infection by fecal flotation, and blood smears were examined for hemoparasites. Five (50%) of 10 A. weddellii serum samples tested by complement fixation (CF) for psittacine polyomavirus antibodies were positive, and three (19%) of 16 A. weddellii samples tested by virus neutralization (VN) for psittacine polyomavirus antibodies were positive, yielding a total of 8 (38%) of the 21 A. weddellii samples positive for psittacine polyomavirus. Based on CF for herpesvirus, four (11%) of 38 A. weddellii samples had antibodies against herpesvirus. All B. sanctithomae were negative for psittacine polyomavirus and psittacine herpesvirus. Thirty-five of the A. weddellii tested were negative for Chlamydia psittaci by CF, latex agglutination, and elementary body agglutination, and all B. sanctithomae were negative for Chlamydia psittaci by the CF test. Nine A. weddellii and eight B. sanctithomae evaluated for paramyxovirus-1 titers by the hemagglutination inhibition test were negative. All fecal samples were negative for ascarids or coccidia by fecal flotation, and all blood smears were negative for hemoparasites by direct microscopic examination. This is the first known description of psittacine polvomavirus and psittacine herpesvirus in free-ranging parrots. Serologic evidence of Pachecos disease herpesvirus in wild A. weddellii is interesting in light of the fact that Aratinga spp. are considered to be possible carriers of this virus in captivity.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Parrots Eat Nutritious Foods despite Toxins

James D. Gilardi; Catherine A. Toft

Background Generalist herbivores are challenged not only by the low nitrogen and high indigestibility of their plant foods, but also by physical and chemical defenses of plants. This study investigated the foods of wild parrots in the Peruvian Amazon and asked whether these foods contain dietary components that are limiting for generalist herbivores (protein, lipids, minerals) and in what quantity; whether parrots chose foods based on nutrient content; and whether parrots avoid plants that are chemically defended. Methodology/Principal Findings We made 224 field observations of free-ranging parrots of 17 species in 8 genera foraging on 102 species of trees in an undisturbed tropical rainforest, in two dry seasons (July-August 1992–1993) and one wet season (January-February1994). We performed laboratory analyses of parts of plants eaten and not eaten by parrots and brine shrimp assays of toxicity as a proxy for vertebrates. Parrots ate seeds, fruits, flowers, leaves, bark, and insect larvae, but up to 70% of their diet comprised seeds of many species of tropical trees, in various stages of ripeness. Plant parts eaten by parrots were rich in protein, lipid, and essential minerals, as well as potentially toxic chemicals. Seeds were higher than other plant materials in protein and lipid and lower in fiber. Large macaws of three species ate foods higher in protein and lipids and lower in fiber compared to plant parts available but not eaten. Macaws ate foods that were lower in phenolic compounds than foods they avoided. Nevertheless, foods eaten by macaws contained measurable levels of toxicity. Macaws did not appear to make dietary selections based on mineral content. Conclusions/Significance Parrots represent a remarkable example of a generalist herbivore that consumes seeds destructively despite plant chemical defenses. With the ability to eat toxic foods, rainforest-dwelling parrots exploited a diversity of nutritious foods, even in the dry season when food was scarce for other frugivores and granivores.


Journal of Wildlife Diseases | 2001

EPIDERMOPTID MANGE IN LAYSAN ALBATROSS FLEDGLINGS IN HAWAII

Kirsten V. K. Gilardi; James D. Gilardi; Anthony A. Frank; M. Lee Goff; Walter M. Boyce

Mange caused by the epidermoptid mite Myialges nudus (Acari: Epidermoptidae) is described in 31 dead fledgling Laysan albatrosses (Phoebastria immutabilis) from Midway Atoll (Hawaii, USA) sampled from 18 June to 10 July 1990 and from 21 June to 22 July 1991. This is the first record for this parasite from this host. Mites were collected from the skin; were located primarily in the stratum corneum; and were associated with mild to severe granulomatous inflammation, hyperkeratosis, dermal edema, ballooning degeneration of keratinocytes, neovascularization, and sub-dermal fibrosis. The severity of inflammation in some birds suggested that dermatitis due to M. nudus could be a significant cause of morbidity, or even mortality, in these birds.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Reproductive parameters in the critically endangered Blue-throated Macaw: limits to the recovery of a parrot under intensive management.

Igor Berkunsky; Gonzalo Daniele; Federico Pablo Kacoliris; José A. Díaz-Luque; Carmen P. Silva Frias; Rosana Aramburú; James D. Gilardi

Rediscovered in the wild twenty years ago, the breeding biology of wild Blue-throated Macaws remains largely unexplored, yet is essential to its effective conservation and recovery. Here, we analyse reproductive parameters in an intensively managed wild population of Blue-throated Macaws, providing the first data on the breeding biology of this critically endangered species. During the six-year study period, 2007–2012, the number of active breeding pairs either remained constant or decreased, depending on the site, and no new breeding pairs were discovered despite extensive searching. We documented nesting attempts in natural cavities in dead palms or live hardwoods, and artificial nest boxes. Egg-laying was concentrated during the end of dry season and the beginning of the wet season, August through December. Hatching failure was the greatest cause of egg losses. Half of the breeding attempts of Blue-throated Macaws produced at least one fledging, on average two, after a 85 days nestling period. An average of 4.3 nestlings per year fledged from all known wild nests combined. Each pair lost roughly 65% of its initial reproductive investment at each nesting attempt. In most successful nesting attempts of individualized pairs, a new nesting attempt was not detected the following year. All monitored breeding pairs showed high nest site fidelity, reusing hardwood-tree cavities and nest boxes. Our findings will aid conservation efforts by refining current actions and prompting new approaches towards the conservation and recovery of the Blue-throated Macaw.


Bird Conservation International | 2017

The effects of spatial survey bias and habitat suitability on predicting the distribution of threatened species living in remote areas

Laura Cardador; José A. Díaz-Luque; Fernando Hiraldo; James D. Gilardi; José Luis Tella

Knowledge of a species’ potential distribution and the suitability of available habitat are fundamental for effective conservation planning and management. However, the quality of information on the distribution of species and their required habitats is highly variable in terms of accuracy and availability across taxa and regions, particularly in tropical landscapes where accessibility is especially challenging. Species distribution models (SDMs) provide predictive tools for addressing gaps for poorly surveyed species, but they rarely consider biases in geographical distribution of records and their consequences. We applied SDMs and variation partitioning analyses to investigate the relative importance of habitat characteristics, human accessibility, and their joint effects in the global distribution of the Critically Endangered Blue-throated Macaw Ara glaucogularis , a species endemic to the Amazonian flooded savannas of Bolivia. The probability of occurrence was skewed towards more accessible areas, mostly secondary roads. Variability in observed occurrence patterns was mostly accounted for by the pure effect of habitat characteristics (76.2%), indicating that bias in the geographical distribution of occurrences does not invalidate species-habitat relationships derived from niche models. However, observed spatial covariation between land-use at a landscape scale and accessibility (joint contribution: 22.3%) may confound the independent role of land-use in the species distribution. New surveys should prioritise collecting data in more remote (less accessible) areas better distributed with respect to land-use composition at a landscape scale. Our results encourage wider application of partitioning methods to quantify the extent of sampling bias in datasets used in habitat modelling for a better understanding of species-habitat relationships, and add insights into the potential distribution of our study species and opportunities for its conservation.


Oryx | 2016

Occupancy and abundance of large macaws in the Beni savannahs, Bolivia

Igor Berkunsky; Rosana Cepeda; Claudia Marinelli; M. Verónica Simoy; Gonzalo Daniele; Federico Pablo Kacoliris; José A. Díaz Luque; Facundo Gandoy; Rosana Aramburú; James D. Gilardi

Monitoring of wild populations is central to species conservation and can pose a number of challenges. To identify trends in populations of parrots, monitoring programmes that explicitly take detectability into account are needed. We assessed an occupancy model that explicitly accounted for detectability as a tool for monitoring the large macaws of Bolivias Beni savannahs: the blue-throated Ara glaucogularis , blue-and-yellow Ara ararauna and red-and-green macaws Ara chloropterus . We also evaluated the joint presence of the three macaw species and estimated their abundance in occupied areas. We modelled occupancy and detection for the three macaw species by combining several site and visit covariates and we described their conditional occupancy. Macaws occupied two thirds of the surveyed area and at least two species occurred together in one third of this area. Probability of detection was 0.48–0.86. For each macaw species, occupancy was affected by the abundance of the other two species, the richness of cavity-nesting species, and the distance to the nearest village. We identified key priority areas for the conservation of these macaws. The flexibility of occupancy methods provides an efficient tool for monitoring macaw occupancy at the landscape level, facilitating prediction of the range of macaw species at a large number of sites, with relatively little effort. This technique could be used in other regions in which the monitoring of threatened parrot populations requires innovative approaches.


Journal of Chemical Ecology | 1999

Biochemical Functions of Geophagy in Parrots: Detoxification of Dietary Toxins and Cytoprotective Effects

James D. Gilardi; Sean S. Duffey; Charles A. Munn; Lisa A. Tell


Conservation Biology | 2001

Nest Poaching in Neotropical Parrots

Timothy F. Wright; Catherine A. Toft; Ernesto Enkerlin-Hoeflich; Jaime Gonzalez-Elizondo; Adriana Rodríguez-Ferraro; Franklin Rojas-Suárez; Virginia Sanz; Ana Trujillo; Steven R. Beissinger; A Vicente Berovides; A Xiomara Gálvez; Ann T. Brice; Kim Joyner; Jessica R. Eberhard; James D. Gilardi; Susan E. Koenig; Scott H. Stoleson; Paulo Martuscelli; J. Michael Meyers; Katherine Renton; Angélica M. Rodríguez; Ana C. Sosa-Asanza; Francisco J. Vilella; James W. Wiley


Ibis | 2008

Geophagy in New Guinea birds

Jared M. Diamond; K. David Bishop; James D. Gilardi

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Gonzalo Daniele

National University of La Plata

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Federico Pablo Kacoliris

National University of La Plata

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Igor Berkunsky

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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Rosana Aramburú

National University of La Plata

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Rosana Cepeda

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Claudia Marinelli

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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