2001
DOI: 10.1590/s0073-47212001000100015
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Abstract: and in semicaptivity conditions. Seventy three vegetable species and two fungi species were recorded. It was registered also the consumption of ticks, salt, land, bricks and scats of another animals. The main vegetable parts consumed in order of importance were young leaves and outbreaks (green parts), fruit and flowers.

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Cited by 19 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…In the same study, the grey brocket deer was also observed feeding on ticks from the species Haemaphysalis kohlsi (Ixodida, Ixodidae), which were found on other deer and a tapir, and was also observed feeding on an unidentified lepidopteran (Richard & Juliá 2001). Earthy substances (geophagia), bird bones (osteophagia) and animal excrement (coprophagia) were also observed to be food items, in addition to salt and tiles from an old building site.…”
Section: Diets Of the Red And Grey Brocket Deermentioning
confidence: 69%
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“…In the same study, the grey brocket deer was also observed feeding on ticks from the species Haemaphysalis kohlsi (Ixodida, Ixodidae), which were found on other deer and a tapir, and was also observed feeding on an unidentified lepidopteran (Richard & Juliá 2001). Earthy substances (geophagia), bird bones (osteophagia) and animal excrement (coprophagia) were also observed to be food items, in addition to salt and tiles from an old building site.…”
Section: Diets Of the Red And Grey Brocket Deermentioning
confidence: 69%
“…These studies were conducted in rural communities in the Amazon where the species is often abundant and widely hunted, thereby facilitating access to butchered stomachs for analysis (Branan et al 1985, Bisbal 1994, Bodmer 1991b, Gayot et al 2004. Studies of the grey brocket deer mostly relied on stomach content analyses (used in 55% of the records) (Stallings 1984, Branan et al 1985, Bodmer 1991b, Bisbal 1994, Gayot et al 2004, followed by fecal analyses (33%) (Kufner et al 2008, Pinder 2004, Serbent et al 2011) and direct observation (22%) (Richard et al 1995, Richard & Juliá 2001. Overall, for the five ungulates, the analysis of fecal or stomach samples was the most common type of analysis (Figure 1).…”
Section: Methods Of Diet Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
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