García-Castaño, J.L., Jordano, P. and Kollmann, J. 2006. Spatial variation of post-dispersal seed removal by rodents in highland microhabitats of Spain and Switzerland. Seed Science Research, 16: 213-222.
Few
data are available and little is known about spatial variation in post-dispersal
seed removal at different levels throughout the geographic range of a plant
species. Here, we compare post-dispersal seed removal by rodents within
and among sites in two distinct regions, the south-eastern Spanish Mediterranean
highlands and the Swiss Jura. Seed removal was assessed experimentally
for four fleshy-fruited species (Berberis vulgaris, Crataegus monogyna,
Rosa spp. and Taxus baccata) in heterogeneous sites with distinct microhabitats.
A factorial general linear model (GLM) analysis was used to evaluate the
relative influence of species- specific seed traits on removal at three
spatial levels (microhabitat, site and region). In both highland ecosystems,
live trapping revealed that rodents were the main seed removers: Apodemus
sylvaticus was observed in both regions, whereas A.
flavicollis and Clethrionomys
glareolus occurred only at the Swiss sites. There was a significant difference
in seed removal between regions, and the preferences of the rodents varied
among plant species and microhabi- tats. Variation in rodent presence explained
some differences in seed removal between regions and among microhabitats.
Finally, the effect of rodent presence on seed removal differs due to both
regional and microhabitat effects.
| Photo: Ripe fruits of Berberis vulgaris. |