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Article
A Continent-Wide Study Reveals Clear Relationships between Regional Abiotic Conditions and Post-Dispersal Seed Predation
Journal of Biogeography (2015)
  • John L. Orrock
  • Elizabeth T. Borer
  • Lars A. Brudvig, Michigan State University
  • Jennifer Firn
  • Andrew S. MacDougall
  • Brett A. Melbourne, University of Colorado, Boulder
  • Louie H. Yang, University of California, Davis
  • Dirk V. Baker
  • Avi Bar-Massada
  • Michael J. Crawley
  • Ellen I. Damschen
  • Kendi F. Davies, University of Colorado, Boulder
  • Daniel S. Gruner, University of Maryland
  • Adam D. Kay
  • Eric Lind
  • Rebecca L. McCulley, University of Kentucky
  • Eric W. Seabloom
Abstract

Aim
Large-scale patterns linking energy availability, biological productivity and diversity form a central focus of ecology. Despite evidence that the activity and abundance of animals may be limited by climatic variables associated with regional biological productivity (e.g. mean annual precipitation and annual actual evapotranspiration), it is unclear whether plant–granivore interactions are themselves influenced by these climatic factors across broad spatial extents. We evaluated whether climatic conditions that are known to alter the abundance and activity of granivorous animals also affect rates of seed removal.

Location
Eleven sites across temperate North America.

Methods
We used a common protocol to assess the removal of the same seed species (Avena sativa) over a 2-day period. Model selection via the Akaike information criterion was used to determine a set of candidate binomial generalized linear mixed models that evaluated the relationship between local climatic data and post-dispersal seed predation.

Results
Annual actual evapotranspiration was the single best predictor of the proportion of seeds removed. Annual actual evapotranspiration and mean annual precipitation were both positively related to mean seed removal and were included in four and three of the top five models, respectively. Annual temperature range was also positively related to seed removal and was an explanatory variable in three of the top four models.

Main conclusions
Our work provides the first evidence that energy and precipitation, which are known to affect consumer abundance and activity, also translate to strong, predictable patterns of seed predation across a continent. More generally, these findings suggest that future changes in temperature and precipitation could have widespread consequences for plant species composition in grasslands, through impacts on plant recruitment.

Keywords
  • Annual actual evapotranspiration,
  • AET,
  • climate,
  • granivory,
  • North America,
  • plant-consumer interactions,
  • precipitation,
  • seed predation
Publication Date
April, 2015
Citation Information
John L. Orrock, Elizabeth T. Borer, Lars A. Brudvig, Jennifer Firn, et al.. "A Continent-Wide Study Reveals Clear Relationships between Regional Abiotic Conditions and Post-Dispersal Seed Predation" Journal of Biogeography Vol. 42 Iss. 4 (2015)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/rebecca_mcculley/56/