Seed hoarding by rodents of the Monte Desert, Argentina

Food storage is an important adaptation of several animal species to the temporally variable or unpredictable food supplies that are typical of desert environments. In the present study, whether Eligmodontia typus and Graomys griseoflavus inhabiting sand dunes in the Monte desert displayed scatter‐h...

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Veröffentlicht in:Austral ecology 2001-06, Vol.26 (3), p.259-263
Hauptverfasser: Giannoni, Stella M., Dacar, Mariana, Taraborelli, Paula, Borghi, Carlos E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Food storage is an important adaptation of several animal species to the temporally variable or unpredictable food supplies that are typical of desert environments. In the present study, whether Eligmodontia typus and Graomys griseoflavus inhabiting sand dunes in the Monte desert displayed scatter‐hoarding was investigated. Both rodent species prepared surface caches by digging small holes (1–3 cm deep) in the soil. Caches were partially covered with sand and dry leaves, which meant that all of the cache sites at each station could be found. Most caches were found below shrubs, that is, in a sheltered microhabitat rather than near the food source. The mean distance between caches and seed sources was significantly higher than the mean distance from food sources to shrubs. The proportion of caches was significantly higher in shrubs with high safety cover. The adaptive significance of this foraging behaviour could be a competitive tactic for the rapid sequestering of food from a rich and ephemeral source. Such behaviour would reflect predation risk, which constitutes an important foraging cost in deserts, and could also influence plant community dynamics.
ISSN:1442-9985
1442-9993
DOI:10.1046/j.1442-9993.2001.01112.x