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Journal ArticleOpen Access

The functional response of a hoarding seed predator to mast seeding

Author Affiliations
McGill University, University of Alberta, Institut de Biologia Evolutiva, University of Edinburgh, ...
Published InEcology
Year2010
Citations130

Abstract

Mast seeding involves the episodic and synchronous production of large seed crops by perennial plants. The predator satiation hypothesis proposes that mast seeding maximizes seed escape because seed predators consume a decreasing proportion of available seeds with increasing seed production. However, the seed escape benefits of masting depend not only on whether predators are satiated at high levels of seed production, but also on the shape of their functional response (type II vs. type III), and the actual proportion of available seeds that they consume at different levels of seed production. North American red squirrels (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus) are the primary vertebrate predator of white spruce (Picea glauca) mast seed crops in many boreal regions because they hoard unopened cones in…
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