Caching rodents disproportionately disperse seed beneath invasive grass
Seed dispersal by caching rodents is a context-dependent mutualism in many systems. Plants benefit when seed remaining in shallow caches germinates before being eaten, often gaining protection from beetles and a favorable microsite in the process. Caching in highly unfavorable microsites, conversely...
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ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-6224592017-02-09T03:00:35Z Caching rodents disproportionately disperse seed beneath invasive grass Sommers, Pacifica Chesson, Peter Univ Arizona, Ecol & Evolutionary Biol cache Chaetodipus baileyi Chaetodipus intermedius Heteromyidae invasion mutualism disruption Neotoma albigula Parkinsonia microphylla Pennisetum ciliare predator avoidance Sonoran Desert Seed dispersal by caching rodents is a context-dependent mutualism in many systems. Plants benefit when seed remaining in shallow caches germinates before being eaten, often gaining protection from beetles and a favorable microsite in the process. Caching in highly unfavorable microsites, conversely, could undermine the dispersal benefit for the plant. Plant invasions could disrupt dispersal benefits of seed caching by attracting rodents to the protection of a dense invasive canopy which inhibits the establishment of native seedlings beneath it. To determine whether rodents disproportionately cache seed under the dense canopy of an invasive grass in southeastern Arizona, we used nontoxic fluorescent powder and ultraviolet light to locate caches of seed offered to rodents in the field. We fitted a general habitat-use model, which showed that disproportionate use of plant cover by caching rodents (principally Chaetodipus spp.) increased with moonlight. Across all moon phases, when rodents cached under plants, they cached under the invasive grass disproportionately to its relative cover. A greenhouse experiment showed that proximity to the invasive grass reduced the growth and survival of seedlings of a common native tree (Parkinsonia microphylla) whose seeds are dispersed by caching rodents. Biased dispersal of native seed to the base of an invasive grass could magnify the competitive effect of this grass on native plants, further reducing their recruitment and magnifying the effect of the invasion. 2017-02-07 Article Sommers, P., and P. Chesson. 2016. Caching rodents disproportionately disperse seed beneath invasive grass. Ecosphere 7(12):e01596. 10.1002/ecs2.1596 2150-8925 10.1002/ecs2.1596/full http://hdl.handle.net/10150/622459 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/622459 ECOSPHERE en http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ecs2.1596/abstract © 2016 Sommers and Chesson. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License WILEY-BLACKWELL |
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en |
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topic |
cache Chaetodipus baileyi Chaetodipus intermedius Heteromyidae invasion mutualism disruption Neotoma albigula Parkinsonia microphylla Pennisetum ciliare predator avoidance Sonoran Desert |
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cache Chaetodipus baileyi Chaetodipus intermedius Heteromyidae invasion mutualism disruption Neotoma albigula Parkinsonia microphylla Pennisetum ciliare predator avoidance Sonoran Desert Sommers, Pacifica Chesson, Peter Caching rodents disproportionately disperse seed beneath invasive grass |
description |
Seed dispersal by caching rodents is a context-dependent mutualism in many systems. Plants benefit when seed remaining in shallow caches germinates before being eaten, often gaining protection from beetles and a favorable microsite in the process. Caching in highly unfavorable microsites, conversely, could undermine the dispersal benefit for the plant. Plant invasions could disrupt dispersal benefits of seed caching by attracting rodents to the protection of a dense invasive canopy which inhibits the establishment of native seedlings beneath it. To determine whether rodents disproportionately cache seed under the dense canopy of an invasive grass in southeastern Arizona, we used nontoxic fluorescent powder and ultraviolet light to locate caches of seed offered to rodents in the field. We fitted a general habitat-use model, which showed that disproportionate use of plant cover by caching rodents (principally Chaetodipus spp.) increased with moonlight. Across all moon phases, when rodents cached under plants, they cached under the invasive grass disproportionately to its relative cover. A greenhouse experiment showed that proximity to the invasive grass reduced the growth and survival of seedlings of a common native tree (Parkinsonia microphylla) whose seeds are dispersed by caching rodents. Biased dispersal of native seed to the base of an invasive grass could magnify the competitive effect of this grass on native plants, further reducing their recruitment and magnifying the effect of the invasion. |
author2 |
Univ Arizona, Ecol & Evolutionary Biol |
author_facet |
Univ Arizona, Ecol & Evolutionary Biol Sommers, Pacifica Chesson, Peter |
author |
Sommers, Pacifica Chesson, Peter |
author_sort |
Sommers, Pacifica |
title |
Caching rodents disproportionately disperse seed beneath invasive grass |
title_short |
Caching rodents disproportionately disperse seed beneath invasive grass |
title_full |
Caching rodents disproportionately disperse seed beneath invasive grass |
title_fullStr |
Caching rodents disproportionately disperse seed beneath invasive grass |
title_full_unstemmed |
Caching rodents disproportionately disperse seed beneath invasive grass |
title_sort |
caching rodents disproportionately disperse seed beneath invasive grass |
publisher |
WILEY-BLACKWELL |
publishDate |
2017 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10150/622459 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/622459 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT sommerspacifica cachingrodentsdisproportionatelydisperseseedbeneathinvasivegrass AT chessonpeter cachingrodentsdisproportionatelydisperseseedbeneathinvasivegrass |
_version_ |
1718413136369811456 |