76.4 F
Charlotte Amalie
Wednesday, April 23, 2025
HomeNewsLocal newsWho Was Nibbling on Our Passion Fruit?

Who Was Nibbling on Our Passion Fruit?

Some of the passion fruits we harvested were partially skinned. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

We were delighted to have a bountiful passion fruit harvest this year. However, we got frustrated when they kept hanging on the vines high up in the trees until long after our holiday guests were gone.

Passion fruits usually stay on the vine until they start to turn yellow. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

My husband went out every morning to check if any fruit had fallen, and finally one day came in triumphantly with a perfect yellow one. He cut it in half and shared it with me. It smelled heavenly and we just slurped out the seeds and pulp. Then there were no more for maybe a couple of weeks.

When more started dropping, he realized they were rolling and not just lying right under the trees. Some of them went back pretty far into the bush and maybe eluded him for a day or so.

 

Most of them were fine, though they weren’t all yellow yet. As they ripen their skins get crumply and messy looking on the outside. Then they are the sweetest.

Our freshly harvested passion fruits ranged from green to yellow. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

But there were quite a few that turned out to have been nibbled. And nibbled in a very particular way – just an area of the skin was taken off. The pulp and seeds were still intact behind the membrane that contains them.

We thought this was very strange. Who would bite a passion fruit and not eat the juicy pulp? We thought about possible fruit bandits. So many possibilities.

Birds?

I saw some pearly-eyed thrashers up on the vines. I didn’t think they would be content with just the skin, though. They have sharp beaks and can hollow out our papayas entirely, just leaving part of the skin hanging there. However, passion fruits have much thicker skin, and I didn’t see any hanging ones that seemed partially eaten. So maybe not thrashers.

Pearly-eyed thrashers like to eat fruit but are not just nibblers. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

I have seen bananaquits pecking at our sugar apples, especially when the fruits are super soft. Again, though, they tend to go after fruit on the tree and anyway might not have been able to puncture the passion fruit skin.

Bananaquits like to peck at softer fruits. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

Deer?

There are plenty of deer foraging around our house. Mostly they eat leaves and young shoots. Probably they would eat passion fruit lying on the ground, though I think they would chomp down the whole thing, not just nibble.

White-tailed deer are voracious eaters so probably would consume the whole fruit. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

Iguanas?

These days we don’t have many iguanas near the house. When I do see them, they are lounging around on the trees down by the pond. They are vegetarians and can climb trees or grab fruit on the ground. But they are more gobblers than nibblers

Green iguanas do eat fruits but probably don’t nibble. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

Bats

I thought of the local fruit bats – they are small and might be nibblers. I asked my friend Kevel Lindsay, who has done bat research on St. John, but he was doubtful since I wasn’t seeing any damage to the fruits hanging on the vines. Kevel thought it could be either a hermit crab or a land crab doing the nibbling. And he also mentioned various insects that might also be attracted to a fruit lying on the ground.

Crabs?

We did see an enormous hermit crab roaming around out back during the passion fruit dropping period. It sometimes eats kibbles out of the cats’ bowl and sleeps in the storage area. I put a partially eaten passion fruit in the bowl to tempt the hermit crab, and it crawled in to investigate but left without touching it. Maybe just not hungry.

The big hermit crab rejected my offering of a partially eaten passion fruit. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

Since we live next to the wetlands, there are large land crabs that often come by to scavenge along the ground at night. They eat fruits and leaves as well as insects and worms, and also check out spilled cat food. They are likely nibblers since their mouths might not be able to bite deep into the interior of the passion fruit.

Large land crabs could have been nibbling the passion fruits. (Photo by Gail Karlsson)

All that’s left of the passion fruits now are the seeds sprouting in various pots and a jar of frozen pulp I extracted for flavoring drinks. Meanwhile besides having fun gathering and savoring the tasty fruits we also enjoyed the backyard investigations of our creature neighbors.

—————————————————————————————————-

Gail Karlsson is the author of a new photo book Looking for Birds on St. John, as well as two other books about nature in the Virgin Islands – The Wild Life in an Island House, and a guide book Learning About Trees and Plants – A Project of the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of St. John. Follow her on Instagram @gailkarlsson and at gvkarlsson.blogspot.com.

Keeping our community informed is our top priority.
If you have a news tip to share, please call or text us at 340-228-8784.

Support local + independent journalism in the U.S. Virgin Islands

Unlike many news organizations, we haven't put up a paywall – we want to keep our journalism as accessible as we can. Our independent journalism costs time, money and hard work to keep you informed, but we do it because we believe that it matters. We know that informed communities are empowered ones. If you appreciate our reporting and want to help make our future more secure, please consider donating.