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Seed harvesting by a generalist consumer is context-dependent: Interactive effects across multiple spatial scales
Oikos (2013)
  • Eugene W. Schupp, Utah State University
Abstract
Granivore foraging decisions affect consumer success and determine the quantity and spatial pattern of seed survival. These decisions are influenced by environmental variation at spatial scales ranging from landscapes to local foraging patches. In a field experiment, the effects of seed patch variation across three spatial scales on seed removal by western harvester ants Pogonomyrmex occidentalis were evaluated. At the largest scale we assessed harvesting in different plant communities, at the intermediate scale we assessed harvesting at different distances from ant mounds, and at the smallest scale we assessed the effects of interactions among seed species in local seed neighborhoods on seed harvesting (i.e. resource–consumer interface). Selected seed species were presented alone (monospecific treatment) and in mixture with Bromus tectorum (cheatgrass; mixture treatment) at four distances from P. occidentalis mounds in adjacent intact sagebrush and non-native cheatgrass-dominated communities in the Great Basin, Utah, USA.
Disciplines
Publication Date
2013
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0706.2012.19969.x
Citation Information
Eugene W. Schupp. "Seed harvesting by a generalist consumer is context-dependent: Interactive effects across multiple spatial scales" Oikos Vol. 122 Iss. 4 (2013) p. 563 - 574
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/eugene_schupp/138/