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Effect of woodland patch size on rodent seed predation in a fragmented landscape.

Loman, Jon LU (2007) In Web Ecology 7. p.47-52
Abstract
Predation on large woody plant seeds; chestnuts, acorns and sloe kernels, was studied in

deciduous forests of two size classes: small woodlots (< 1 ha) and large woods (at least 25

ha) in southern Sweden. Seeds used for the study were artificially distributed on the

forest ground and seed predation measured as seed removal. Predation rate was similar

in both types of woods. However, rodent density was higher in small woodlots and a

correction for differences in rodent density showed that predation rate per individual

rodent was higher in the large woods. This suggests that the small woodlots (including

the border zone) and their adjacent fields have more rodent food per area... (More)
Predation on large woody plant seeds; chestnuts, acorns and sloe kernels, was studied in

deciduous forests of two size classes: small woodlots (< 1 ha) and large woods (at least 25

ha) in southern Sweden. Seeds used for the study were artificially distributed on the

forest ground and seed predation measured as seed removal. Predation rate was similar

in both types of woods. However, rodent density was higher in small woodlots and a

correction for differences in rodent density showed that predation rate per individual

rodent was higher in the large woods. This suggests that the small woodlots (including

the border zone) and their adjacent fields have more rodent food per area unit. A small

woodlot cannot be considered a representative sample of a large continuous forest, even

if the habitats appear similar. There was a strong effect of rodent density on seed predation

rate. This suggests that rodents are major seed predators in this habitat. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Web Ecology
volume
7
pages
47 - 52
publisher
European Ecological Federation in cooperation with Oikos
external identifiers
  • scopus:34248382146
ISSN
1399-1183
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
0a463252-b646-44e1-a054-4497b3033100 (old id 942289)
alternative location
http://www.oikos.ekol.lu.se/wepdfs/Web_Ecol.7.47-52.pdf
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 15:21:33
date last changed
2022-01-28 04:59:38
@article{0a463252-b646-44e1-a054-4497b3033100,
  abstract     = {{Predation on large woody plant seeds; chestnuts, acorns and sloe kernels, was studied in<br/><br>
deciduous forests of two size classes: small woodlots (&lt; 1 ha) and large woods (at least 25<br/><br>
ha) in southern Sweden. Seeds used for the study were artificially distributed on the<br/><br>
forest ground and seed predation measured as seed removal. Predation rate was similar<br/><br>
in both types of woods. However, rodent density was higher in small woodlots and a<br/><br>
correction for differences in rodent density showed that predation rate per individual<br/><br>
rodent was higher in the large woods. This suggests that the small woodlots (including<br/><br>
the border zone) and their adjacent fields have more rodent food per area unit. A small<br/><br>
woodlot cannot be considered a representative sample of a large continuous forest, even<br/><br>
if the habitats appear similar. There was a strong effect of rodent density on seed predation<br/><br>
rate. This suggests that rodents are major seed predators in this habitat.}},
  author       = {{Loman, Jon}},
  issn         = {{1399-1183}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{47--52}},
  publisher    = {{European Ecological Federation in cooperation with Oikos}},
  series       = {{Web Ecology}},
  title        = {{Effect of woodland patch size on rodent seed predation in a fragmented landscape.}},
  url          = {{http://www.oikos.ekol.lu.se/wepdfs/Web_Ecol.7.47-52.pdf}},
  volume       = {{7}},
  year         = {{2007}},
}