Sork Victoria L, Boucher Douglas H
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan, 48109, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Oecologia. 1977 Sep;28(3):289-299. doi: 10.1007/BF00751606.
The rate at which fallen hickory nuts are removed from beneath the parent tree, and the effect on this rate of the seed predatorConotrachelus affinis, was studied in an oak-hickory forest in southeastern Michigan, USA, during a year in which few nuts were produced. The trees responded toConotrachelus, which destroyed half the nut crop, by aborting inviable nuts during the summer. The seed dispersers, mostly gray squirrels, removed fallen nuts rapidly, showing the ability to distinguish viable nuts and remove them preferentially. The number of nuts removed in a week varies directly with the number available, and removal rate increases when many viable nuts are falling. The death of most seeds before dispersal, and the squirrels' efficiency at foraging on nuts and recovering them after burial, imply that successful hickory reproduction takes place only in years of heavy nut production.
在美国密歇根州东南部的一片橡树林山核桃林中,研究了山核桃坚果从母树下方被移除的速率,以及种子捕食者——亲缘果象甲(Conotrachelus affinis)对该速率的影响。研究期间坚果产量很低。树木对破坏了一半坚果作物的亲缘果象甲做出反应,在夏季时使无法存活的坚果脱落。种子传播者大多是灰松鼠,它们会迅速移除掉落的坚果,显示出能够区分可存活坚果并优先移除它们的能力。一周内被移除的坚果数量与可得坚果数量直接相关,当大量可存活坚果掉落时,移除速率会增加。大多数种子在传播前死亡,以及松鼠在寻找坚果和在坚果被埋藏后找回它们方面的效率,意味着山核桃只有在坚果高产的年份才会成功繁殖。