Although tropical forest birds are known to prey upon small lizards and
frogs, no study has documented the attributes of vertebrate-eating birds or
whether birds prey opportunistically on the different elements of the
herpetofauna within tropical communities. This study is based on a 14-mo
investigation on avian diet, supplemented with a 3-y census of frogs and a
1-y census of lizards in a humid forest of central Panama. From 91 bird
species, 1086 regurgitates were collected, in which were found 75 lizards
and 53 frogs. Over 50% of the common, primarily insectivorous bird species
preyed upon lizards or frogs, with a mean frequency of 0.26
prey/sample. These birds (22 species, nine families) foraged on various
substrates from different strata of the forest, fed on invertebrates
averaging from 3.3 to 17.2 mm in length, weighed from 11 to 195 g, and had
bill lengths that varied from 12.2 to 49.8 mm. Based on a logistic
regression analysis, intensity of foraging at army-ant swarms was the
variable that best explained the likelihood that a bird species preyed upon
lizards, leading to a classification that was 91% correct. In contrast, bill
length and body length classified correctly 88% of the frog-eating birds,
which showed a fairly constant 1:7 bill length/body length ratio (as opposed
to a mean but highly variable 1:10 ratio in other species). A multiple
regression analysis showed that seasonal variation in intensity of lizard
predation was positively related to arthropod abundance except during the
breeding season when lizard intake decreased, presumably because nesting
birds did not follow ant swarms. Intensity of frog predation correlated with
frog abundance over time, the latter being inversely related to arthropod
availability. Ninety-seven per cent of all lizards and frogs identified in
the diet samples (n = 105) were from two genera, Anolis and
Eleutherodactylus, respectively. Prey size distribution in the regurgitates
suggested an optimal prey size of 33.5 mm snout-vent length (SVL) for
lizards and 14.5 mm SVL for frogs. Birds preyed opportunistically on the
different Anolis species, but almost exclusively upon juvenile
individuals. Abundances of the different Eleutherodactylus species
correlated with their predation rates, but these frogs represented only 10%
of all the frogs observed during the censuses. The two most common local
anurans, Colostethus flotator and Bufo typhonius, were not taken by any bird
species.