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Neighborhood effects on the tannin‐related foraging decisions of two rodent species under semi‐natural conditions
Author(s) -
WANG Zhenyu,
WANG Bo,
YAN Chuan,
YUAN Shengdong,
CAO Lin
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
integrative zoology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.904
H-Index - 34
ISSN - 1749-4877
DOI - 10.1111/1749-4877.12473
Subject(s) - tannin , hoarding (animal behavior) , foraging , biology , condensed tannin , botany , polyphenol , ecology , proanthocyanidin , biochemistry , antioxidant
Neighborhood effects on seed predation and dispersal processes are usually seed‐characteristic‐dependent; however, how seeds with certain characteristics affect the foraging behavior of rodents in relation to other seeds nearby is unclear. Because large differences in seed characteristics between neighboring seeds may lead to significant differences in rodent foraging preferences, we hypothesized that neighborhood effects were more likely to be detected when paired seeds differed in seed characteristics. We investigated the foraging decisions of two rodent species, the red spiny rat Maxomys surifer and the Chinese white‐bellied rat Niviventer confucianus , in semi‐natural enclosures by presenting them with artificial seeds containing different levels of tannin (0, 3%, and 6% tannin). Both rodents showed similar preferences and preferentially consumed high‐tannin seeds (6% tannin) and scatter hoarded low‐tannin seeds (0 tannin). The scatter hoarding of low‐tannin (0 tannin) and high‐tannin (6% tannin) seeds was significantly higher when these seeds were neighboring higher‐tannin seeds than when they neighbored lower‐tannin seeds, whereas the scatter hoarding of intermediate‐tannin seeds (3% tannin) varied little when they had different neighbors. High‐tannin‐seed (6% tannin) scatter hoarding was lowest when they neighbored low‐tannin seeds (0 tannin), while low‐tannin‐seed (0 tannin) scatter hoarding was highest when they neighbored high‐tannin seeds (6% tannin). Therefore, the seeds that the rodents scatter hoarded were next to (neighbored) seeds that they preferred to eat immediately, and vice versa. Our findings suggest that seed neighborhood effects affect rodent foraging behavior and the relationship between plants and rodents, and may have a profound effect on the regeneration and spatial structure of plant communities.