Native seed dispersal by rodents is negatively influenced by an invasive shrub

  1. A. F. Malo
  2. A. Taylor
  3. M. Díaz
Journal:
Animal Biodiversity and Conservation

ISSN: 1578-665X

Year of publication: 2022

Volume: 45

Issue: 1

Pages: 53-67

Type: Article

DOI: 10.32800/ABC.2022.45.0053 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openOpen access editor

More publications in: Animal Biodiversity and Conservation

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Abstract

Refuge–mediated apparent competition is the mechanism by which invasive plants increase pressure on native plants by providing refuge for generalist consumers. In the UK, the invasive Rhododendron ponticum does not provide food for generalist seed consumers like rodents, but evergreen canopy provides refuge from rodent predators, and predation and pilferage risk are key factors affecting rodent foraging and caching behaviour. Here we used a seed removal/ seed fate experiment to understand how invasion by an evergreen shrub can alter seed dispersal, seed fate and early recruitment of native trees. We used seeds of four species, small and wind–dispersed (sycamore maple Acer pseudoplatanus and European ash Fraxinus excelsior) and large and animal–dispersed (pedunculate oak Quercus robur and common hazel Corylus avellana), and monitored seed predation and caching in open woodland, edge habitats, and under Rhododendron. In the open woodland, wind–dispersed seeds had a higher probability of being eaten in situ than cached seeds, while the opposite occurred with animal–dispersed seeds. The latter were removed from the open woodland and edge habitats and cached under Rhododendron. This pattern was expected if predation risk was the main factor influencing the decision to eat or to cach a seed. Enhanced dispersal towards Rhododendron cover did not increase the prospects for seed survival, as density of hazel and oak saplings under its cover was close to zero as compared to open woodland, possibly due to increased cache pilferage or low seedling survival under dense shade, or both. Enhanced seed predation of ash and sycamore seeds close to Rhododendron cover also decreased recruitment of these trees. Rhododendron patches biased rodent foraging behaviour towards the negative (net predation) side of the conditional rodent/ tree interaction. This effect will potentially impact native woodland regeneration and further facilitate Rhododendron spread due to refuge–mediated apparent competition.

Funding information

We acknowledge two anonymous referees, Jacques Deere, Lochran Trail and Prof. Tim Coulson for providing constructive comments to a previous draft; Prof. Mick Crawley for information about the history of the Rhododendron patches at the study site; Paul Beasley for help constructing the boxes for the foraging experiments conducted in the lab and Ben Godsall, Gavin Kingcome, and Lukasz Lukomski for help with habitat data collection. This research was funded by a ERC Marie Curie fellowship (PIEF–GA–2008–220322). During the write up of this manuscript, AFM was partly supported by an ERC grant (249872) and by a Ramón y Cajal research contract from the MINECO (RYC–2016–21114).

Funders