Abstract:
This study was conducted on a frugivorous bird species, Yellow-eared Bulbul (Pycnonotus penicillatus)
which is an endemic and threatened species, at Horton Plains National Park (HPNP), from September
2015 to November 2017. Direct methods as focal animal sampling and faecal analysis were used to
identify food items of P. penicillatus. Feeding plants were identified using field guides. To find out the
fruit phenology, ten individuals per plant species were tagged. Fruit cover was estimated in the each
tagged tree. According to the present findings, P. penicillatus mainly consumed, 16 species of feeding
plants belonging to eleven families. Among them six endemic, eight native and one introduced species
were observed. P. penicillatus consumed Rubus ellipticus as their major fruit source. There were seeds
of nine plant species were identified by faecal analysis. Maximum ripen fruit cover was recorded from
Solanum mauritianum in the northeast monsoon season, first inter-monsoon season and second intermonsoon season. However, in the southwest monsoon season highest ripen fruit cover was recorded
from Berberis ceylanica. There was a correlation between number of feeding attempts and ripen fruit
cover, of Symplocos bractealis, S. mauritianum and Strobilanthes viscosa. Moreover, there was a
correlation between number of feeding attempts and number of trees in fruiting, of Elaeocarpus
coreaceus, Passiflora tripartita, Eugenia mabaeoides and S. viscosa. The present study has revealed
importance of the floral community to the P. penicillatus. Therefore, it is important to recommend
monitoring protocols about the seasonal variations of fruiting phenology in and around HPNP, which
are harbouring a large variety of feeding plants of the threatened birds species such as P. penicillatus
for conservational purposes.