Predicting forest management effects on oak-rodent mutualisms
Authored by Thorsten Wiegand, Teresa Moran-Lopez, Morales Juan Manuel, Fernando Valladares, Mario Diaz
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1111/oik.02884
Sponsors:
Comunidad de Madrid
Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO)
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Wood mice Apodemus sylvaticus are the main dispersers of acorns in
highly managed Mediterranean holm-oak woodlands. Mice mobilize and cache
acorns to store them for winter consumption. They carry acorns away from
potential competitors, face predation risks during mobilization, and
cache acorns in areas where pilfering risks are low. However, mice can
act either as net predators or as moderately efficient dispersers, depending on the way landscape management affects intraspecific
competition for acorns and shelter availability. To assess the influence
of landscape structure and mouse behavior on acorn dispersal, we
developed an agent-based model (ABM) that translates forest management
into changes in key environmental factors driving mouse foraging
decisions.
The model was able to predict accurately acorn dispersal patterns in a
wide range of forest management practices based on information on forest
habitat availability, stem density and shrub cover. Sensitivity analysis
revealed that caching rates emerged from the interplay between
intraspecific competition for seeds and predation risk accepted during
mobilization. It also showed that intraspecific competition for acorns
decreased with increasing habitat loss (due to positive edge effects on
acorn production) while landscape resistance to mouse movements
increased. As a result, the net benefits of caching declined and acorn
predation became the dominant strategy. Finally, we assessed the effects
of shrub encroachment as a management practice to enhance dispersal
services in savanna-like landscapes (dehesas). The model predicted
non-linear responses with a 65\% threshold of shrub cover needed to
achieve relatively high levels of acorn dispersal. This value may not be
compatible with the traditional exploitation of dehesas (livestock
rearing). Our study shows that integrated approaches that combine
environmental change driven by management with behavioral responses of
dispersers improve our understanding of the causes of recruitment
bottlenecks, and are useful tools for evaluating conservation strategies
aimed at enhancing dispersal services.
Tags
Agent-based models
Seed dispersal
Predation risk
Mice apodemus-sylvaticus
Wood mice
Quercus-ilex
Holm oak
Plant-distribution
Spatial-patterns
Size structure