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Boom and bust: The effects of masting on seed predator range dynamics and trophic cascades

August 1, 2024

AimSpatiotemporal variation in resource availability is a strong driver of animal distributions. In the northern hardwood and boreal forests of the northeastern United States, tree mast events provide resource pulses that drive the population dynamics of small mammals, including the American red squirrel (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus), a primary songbird nest predator. This study sought to determine whether mast availability ameliorates their abiotic limits, enabling red squirrel elevational distributions to temporarily expand and negatively impact high-elevation songbirds.

Location

Northeastern United States.

Methods

We used two independent datasets to evaluate our hypotheses. First, we fit a dynamic occupancy model using data from camera trap surveys to evaluate red squirrel distributional responses to pulses in the tree mast. We also assessed population responses using systematic auditory surveys analysed with an open-population binomial mixture model. Further, we used modelled red squirrel abundance in nest-survival models to evaluate whether their abundance is correlated with the daily nest survival of three songbird species.

Results

The tree mast provided a critical resource pulse that resulted in a two-fold increase in the annual elevational distribution of red squirrels. The elevational distribution of red squirrels ranged from a minimum of ~450 m (range: 663–1145 m asl) following two consecutive years without a masting event to a maximum of over 1000 m (range: 443–1545 m asl) after a large mast event. The daily nest survival of three songbird species tended to decline with an increase in the abundance of red squirrels.

Main Conclusions

Tree mast is a central biological phenomenon in many temperate and boreal forests. This study reveals how this resource pulse results in range changes in a small mammal that is both a seed and bird predator, as well as prey for many carnivores. Thus, understanding this phenomenon can inform the conservation and management of northern forests, including breeding songbirds.

Publication Year 2024
Title Boom and bust: The effects of masting on seed predator range dynamics and trophic cascades
DOI 10.1111/ddi.13861
Authors Michael Hallworth, Alexej Sirén, William DeLuca, Timothy Duclos, Kent McFarland, Jason Hill, Christopher Rimmer, Toni Morelli
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Diversity and Distributions
Index ID 70267204
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Northeast Climate Adaptation Science Center
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