Are camouflaged seeds less attacked by wild birds?
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0103-90162010000200007Keywords:
seed camouflage, carbofuran, rhodamine B, visual repellents, bird mortalityAbstract
Wheat, corn and rice crops in Brazil use seeds treated with systemic insecticide/nematicide carbofuran, mixed to rhodamine B red dye. Carbofuran is toxic and rhodamine B is attractive to wild birds that eat up these seeds, resulting in notable mortality during planting. A field experiment was performed in southeast Brazil to evaluate if camouflaged seeds would be less consumed by wild birds in comparison to commercial seeds with red-colored rhodamine B and aposematic blue seeds. Camouflaged seeds were less removed than seeds with rhodamine B and natural colors. The camouflaging was more effective in the presence of irregularities and litter. There was no removal of blue-colored seeds. As legislation requires treated seeds to receive a different color to avoid accidents with humans, camouflaging may be used as replacement of rhodamine B to reduce mortality rates of wild birds.Downloads
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Published
2010-04-01
Issue
Section
Ecology
License
All content of the journal, except where identified, is licensed under a Creative Common attribution-type BY-NC.How to Cite
Are camouflaged seeds less attacked by wild birds? . (2010). Scientia Agricola, 67(2), 170-175. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0103-90162010000200007