Ecology. 2014 Jul;95(7):1759-69. doi: 10.1890/13-1774.1.
Seed predation is an important biotic filter that can influence abundance and spatial distributions of native species through differential effects on recruitment. This filter may also influence the relative abundance of nonnative plants within habitats and the communities' susceptibility to invasion via differences in granivore identity, abundance, and food preference. We evaluated the effect of postdispersal seed predators on the establishment of invasive, naturalized, and native species within and between adjacent forest and steppe communities of eastern Washington, USA that differ in severity of plant invasion. Seed removal from trays placed within guild-specific exclosures revealed that small mammals were the dominant seed predators in both forest and steppe. Seeds of invasive species (Bromus tectorum, Cirsium arvense) were removed significantly less than the seeds of native (Pseudoroegneria spicata, Balsamorhiza sagittata) and naturalized (Secale cereale, Centaurea cyanus) species. Seed predation limited seedling emergence and establishment in both communities in the absence of competition in a pattern reflecting natural plant abundance: S. cereale was most suppressed, B. tectorum was least suppressed, and P. spicata was suppressed at an intermediate level. Furthermore, seed predation reduced the residual seed bank for all species. Seed mass correlated with seed removal rates in the forest and their subsequent effects on plant recruitment; larger seeds were removed at higher rates than smaller seeds. Our vegetation surveys indicate higher densities and canopy cover of nonnative species occur in the steppe compared with the forest understory, suggesting the steppe may be more susceptible to invasion. Seed predation alone, however, did not result in significant differences in establishment for any species between these communities, presumably due to similar total small-mammal abundance between communities. Consequently, preferential seed predation by small mammals predicts plant establishment for our test species within these communities but not between them. Accumulating evidence suggests that seed predation can be an important biotic filter affecting plant establishment via differences in consumer preferences and abundance with important ramifications for plant invasions and in situ community assembly.
种子捕食是一种重要的生物过滤机制,通过对繁殖的不同影响,影响本地物种的丰度和空间分布。这种过滤器还可以通过食草动物的身份、丰度和食物偏好的差异,影响栖息地中非本地植物的相对丰度和群落对入侵的易感性。我们评估了散布后种子捕食者对美国华盛顿东部相邻森林和草原群落中入侵种、归化种和本地种建立的影响,这些群落的植物入侵严重程度不同。在特定种团的围栏内放置托盘,从托盘上移除种子,结果表明,小型哺乳动物是森林和草原中占主导地位的种子捕食者。入侵种(Bromus tectorum、Cirsium arvense)的种子比本地种(Pseudoroegneria spicata、Balsamorhiza sagittata)和归化种(Secale cereale、Centaurea cyanus)的种子更容易被移除。在没有竞争的情况下,种子捕食限制了两个群落中的幼苗出现和建立,这种模式反映了自然植物的丰度:S. cereale 受到的抑制最大,B. tectorum 受到的抑制最小,P. spicata 受到的抑制处于中间水平。此外,种子捕食减少了所有物种的剩余种子库。种子质量与森林中的种子去除率及其对植物繁殖的后续影响相关;较大的种子比较小的种子更容易被移除。我们的植被调查表明,与森林林下层相比,草原中出现了更高密度和更高冠层覆盖的非本地物种,这表明草原可能更容易受到入侵。然而,仅种子捕食并没有导致这些群落中任何物种的建立有显著差异,这可能是由于群落之间小型哺乳动物的总丰度相似。因此,小型哺乳动物对种子的优先捕食可以预测我们测试物种在这些群落中的建立,但不能预测它们之间的建立。越来越多的证据表明,种子捕食可以通过消费者偏好和丰度的差异成为影响植物建立的重要生物过滤机制,这对植物入侵和原地群落组装具有重要影响。