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Animal Biodiversity and Conservation. Volume 39.2 (2016) Pages: 173-184

Pine seed predation by mice: an experimental assessment of preference

Flores-Peredo, R., Bolívar Cimé, B. S.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.32800/abc.2016.39.0173

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Abstract

Seed traits are considered an essential factor influencing rodents’ foraging preferences. We evaluated the mouse’s preferences for seeds of four pine species, Pinus patula, P. pseudostrobus, P. teocote and P. montezumae, that differ in length, width, nutritional content, and concentrated tannins. In ‘cafeteria experiments’ in the laboratory, we tested six of the nine mice species commonly found in the temperate forest of Southern Mexico. Longer and wider seeds were those of P. teocote and P. montezumae. P. teocote seeds had the highest protein content, P. patula were highest in lipids, and P. montezumae seeds were highest in carbohydrates. In concentrated tannins, gallic acid content was highest in P. patula seeds and tannic acid content was highest in P. teocote seeds. Mice preferred small pine seeds with a high lipid and gallic acid content, a low tannic acid content, and an intermediate protein and carbohydrate content. The foraging behavior of rodents, their energy optimization, and the likely effects on seed fate and plant composition would thus be mediated by combinations of seed traits rather than by single seed traits such as size or tannin contents.

Keywords

Bromatological analysis, Concentrated tannins, Energy optimization, Temperate forest, Seed size, Small rodents

Cite

Flores-Peredo, R., Bolívar Cimé, B. S., 2016. Pine seed predation by mice: an experimental assessment of preference. Animal Biodiversity and Conservation, 39: 173-184, DOI: https://doi.org/10.32800/abc.2016.39.0173

Reception date:

18/12/2014

Acceptation date:

26/03/2016

Publication date:

30/06/2016

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