Differences in food hoarding among six species of heteromyid rodents

被引:56
作者
Jenkins, SH [1 ]
Breck, SW [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Nevada, Dept Biol, Reno, NV 89557 USA
关键词
Heteromyidae; kangaroo mice; kangaroo rats; pocket mice; hoarding behavior; larder hoarding; scatter hoarding;
D O I
10.2307/1383013
中图分类号
Q95 [动物学];
学科分类号
071002 ;
摘要
Storing food is an important adaptation of heteromyid rodents to desert environments of southwestern North America. These rodents store seeds in burrows (larder hoarding) and in small, widely scattered caches buried at shallow depths in soil (scatter hoarding). Laboratory trials were done with five species from one site and two species from two other sites to test the hypothesis that larger species would larder hoard relatively more seeds than smaller species. Subjects were tested in arenas consisting of a sand-filled box for scatter hoarding and a nest box for larder hoarding. Chisel-toothed and Merriam's kangaroo rats (Dipodomys microps and D. merriami) from one site larder hoarded more than sympatric dark kangaroo mice (Microdipodops megacephalus) and long-tailed and little pocket mice (Chaetodipus formosus and Perognathus longimembris). Chisel-toothed kangaroo rats larder hoarded more than Merriam's kangaroo rats and little pocket mice larder hoarded more than dark kangaroo mice. These results were consistent with reported information on the relative aggressive behaviors of the species. For subjects from the other two sites, Ord's kangaroo rats (D. ordii) larder hoarded more than the smaller Merriam's kangaroo rats. Pocket mice made larger scatter hoards than kangaroo rats and placed these scatter hoards closer to edges and corners of arenas than kangaroo rats. Differences among species in food-hoarding behavior should be considered in future studies of the community ecology of desert rodents.
引用
收藏
页码:1221 / 1233
页数:13
相关论文
共 41 条
[1]   RANGE USE PATTERNS AND SPATIAL RELATIONSHIPS OF MERRIAM KANGAROO RATS (DIPODOMYS-MERRIAMI) [J].
BEHRENDS, P ;
DALY, M ;
WILSON, MI .
BEHAVIOUR, 1986, 96 :187-209
[2]  
Blair W. F., 1937, Journal of Mammalogy, V18, P188, DOI 10.2307/1374465
[3]  
BLAUSTEIN A R, 1974, Great Basin Naturalist, V34, P312
[4]   INTERSPECIFIC INTERACTIONS BETWEEN 3 SYMPATRIC SPECIES OF KANGAROO RATS (DIPODOMYS) [J].
BLAUSTEIN, AR ;
RISSER, AC .
ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR, 1976, 24 (MAY) :381-385
[5]   AGGRESSIVE-BEHAVIOR OF DIPODOMYS STEPHENSI, AN ENDANGERED SPECIES, AND DIPODOMYS AGILIS, A SYMPATRIC CONGENER [J].
BLEICH, VC ;
PRICE, MV .
JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY, 1995, 76 (02) :646-651
[6]   STRUCTURE IN A DESERT RODENT COMMUNITY - USE OF SPACE AROUND DIPODOMYS-SPECTABILIS MOUNDS [J].
BOWERS, MA ;
BROWN, JH .
OECOLOGIA, 1992, 92 (02) :242-249
[7]   GEOGRAPHIC COMPARISON OF MICROHABITATS USED BY 3 HETEROMYIDS IN RESPONSE TO RAREFACTION [J].
BOWERS, MA .
JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY, 1986, 67 (01) :46-52
[8]   FORAGING BEHAVIOR OF HETEROMYID RODENTS - FIELD EVIDENCE OF RESOURCE PARTITIONING [J].
BOWERS, MA .
JOURNAL OF MAMMALOGY, 1982, 63 (03) :361-367
[9]   Use of an ecotone to test the effects of soil and desert rodents on the distribution of Indian ricegrass [J].
Breck, SW ;
Jenkins, SH .
ECOGRAPHY, 1997, 20 (03) :253-263
[10]  
BRYLSKI P, 1988, EVOLUTION, V42, P391, DOI 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1988.tb04142.x