Division of Biological Sciences, University of Montana, Missoula, Montana 59812, USA.
Ecology. 2010 Apr;91(4):1124-31. doi: 10.1890/09-0332.1.
In fire-adapted ecosystems, fire is presumed to be the dominant ecological force, and little is known about how consumer interactions influence forest regeneration. Here, we investigated seed predation by deer mice (Peromyscus maniculatus) and its effects on recruitment of ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa) and Douglas-fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) seedlings in unburned and recently burned fire-adapted montane forests in west-central Montana, USA. Deer mice were almost twice as abundant in burned than unburned stands. Deer mouse removal of seeds from petri dishes was two times higher in burned than in unburned stands, and seed removal levels were 8% higher for ponderosa pine than for the smaller Douglas-fir seeds. In seed-addition experiments, emergence of seedlings in deer mouse-exclusion cages was almost six times higher in burned compared to unburned forest. In both burned and unburned forest, emergence was lower for ponderosa pine than for Douglas-fir. Seedling survival to establishment did not differ between conifer species but was considerably higher in burned than in unburned forest. However, effects of seed predation on recruitment prevailed over fire effects: in cages allowing access by deer mice, emergence and establishment were extremely rare for both conifer species in both burned and unburned forest. This research suggests that consumer interactions can substantially influence recruitment even in fire-adapted forest ecosystems.
在适应火灾的生态系统中,火灾被认为是主要的生态力量,而对于消费者相互作用如何影响森林更新,人们知之甚少。在这里,我们调查了鹿鼠(Peromyscus maniculatus)对种子的捕食及其对美国中蒙大拿州中西部未燃烧和最近燃烧的适应火灾的山地森林中辐射松(Pinus ponderosa)和黄杉(Pseudotsuga menziesii)幼苗的繁殖的影响。在燃烧的森林中,鹿鼠的数量几乎是未燃烧森林中的两倍。在燃烧的森林中,从培养皿中取出种子的鹿鼠的去除率比未燃烧的森林高两倍,而对辐射松种子的去除率比较小的黄杉种子高 8%。在种子添加实验中,在鹿鼠排除笼中,燃烧森林中的幼苗出苗率比未燃烧森林高近六倍。在燃烧和未燃烧的森林中,辐射松的出苗率都低于黄杉。幼苗的存活到建立在针叶树种之间没有差异,但在燃烧的森林中比未燃烧的森林高得多。然而,种子捕食对繁殖的影响超过了火灾的影响:在允许鹿鼠进入的笼子中,无论是在燃烧的还是未燃烧的森林中,两种针叶树种的出苗和建立都极为罕见。这项研究表明,即使在适应火灾的森林生态系统中,消费者相互作用也可以极大地影响繁殖。