Elsevier

South African Journal of Botany

Volume 108, January 2017, Pages 267-271
South African Journal of Botany

The nightshift: Seed dispersal and consumption differences by rodents before and after dark

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.sajb.2016.11.005Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Gerbilliscus paeba is only active at night and disperses as well as consumes the seeds of Willdenowia incurvata.

  • Rhabdomys pumilio is only active during the day and consumes, but does not disperse seeds.

  • The combination of seed tagging and video evidence can distinguish between the relative roles of different rodent species.

Abstract

Seed burial by dispersal vectors in fire-prone ecosystems is thought to increase seed survival rates by protecting them from fire and other seed consumers. In the fire-prone fynbos, seed burial is usually performed by ants. Historically, rodents in the fynbos were viewed purely as seed consumers; however, more recent evidence suggests that some species may also disperse seeds. This is done by scatter-hoarding the seeds in caches buried below the soil surface. Since seed dispersal and consumption by rodents usually takes place unobserved, it has been difficult to positively confirm which rodents disperse seeds and which ones only consume them. Here, the dispersal and consumptive behaviour of 2 rodents, Rhabdomys pumilio and Gerbilliscus paeba, are disentangled by using a combination of camera traps and the temporal compartmentalisation of seed fate patterns into day versus night in a depauperate, Cape strandveld rodent community. In this study, it is clearly demonstrated that the nocturnal hairy-footed gerbil (G. paeba) dispersed Willdenowia incurvata (Restionaceae) seeds. Although G. paeba also consumes seeds, they cached more seeds than they consumed during the period of observation. In contrast, the diurnal 4-striped mouse (R. pumilio) consumed but never cached seeds left out during the day. These results demonstrate that ecological roles of Cape rodents vary between species and that rodents in general cannot simply be regarded as seed consumers or dispersers as they have in the past.

Keywords

Cape strandveld
Gerbilliscus paeba
Scatter-hoarding
Seed banks
Seed caching
Seed dispersal
Seed predation
Willdenowia incurvata

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