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Vertebrate predators have minimal cascading effects on plant production or seed predation in an intact grassland ecosystem
Authors:Maron John L  Pearson Dean E
Institution:Division of Biological Sciences, University of Montana, Missoula, MT 59812, USA. john.maron@mso.umt.edu
Abstract:The strength of trophic cascades in terrestrial habitats has been the subject of considerable interest and debate. We conducted an 8-year experiment to determine how exclusion of vertebrate predators, ungulates alone (to control for ungulate exclusion from predator exclusion plots) or none of these animals influenced how strongly a three-species assemblage of rodent consumers affected plant productivity. We also examined whether predator exclusion influenced the magnitude of post-dispersal seed predation by mice. Both ungulates and rodents had strong direct effects on graminoid biomass. However, rodent impacts on plant biomass did not differ across plots with or without predators and/or ungulates. Deer mice removed more seeds from seed depots on predator exclusion plots, suggesting trait-mediated indirect effects of predators, but this short-term behavioural response did not translate into longer-term impacts on seed survival. These results suggest that vertebrate predators do not fundamentally influence primary production or seed survival in our system.
Keywords:Giving up density  herbivory  indirect effects  predators  seed predation  small mammals  trait‐mediated indirect effects  trophic cascade
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