Document: KEN-3-52-33

Experimental removal of strong and weak predators: Mice and chipmunks preying on songbird nests.

SCHMIDT, K.A.* 1,2, J.R.GOHEEN 1,3, R.NAUMANN 1 and R.S.OSTFELD 1

Institute of Ecosystem Studies, Millbrook, NY, 12545, USA 1
University of Memphis, Memphis, TN 38152, USA 2
Purdue University, W. Lafayette, IN, 47907, USA 3

Abstract:
We examined the effects of separate removal experiments of white-footed mice (Peromyscus leucopus), and the eastern chipmunk (Tamias striatus), on nest predation rates of forest songbirds. Mice are numerically dominant at our study sites, intensely exploit their habitat, and prior studies in our sites indicated that mice interact strongly, and chipmunks weakly, with other species in the community. Therefore, we hypothesized that removal of mice would result in decreased levels of nest predation relative to treatments with a complete predator assemblage, but that the removal of chipmunks would not. Both hypotheses were supported. Mice depredated > 60% of artificial nests in control plots (mouse populations intact), whereas chipmunks depredated ~ 20%. Daily nest mortality rates were more than halved in mouse removal treatments relative to controls (0.097 vs. 0.221; P<0.005), but were virtually identical between chipmunk removal and control treatments (0.237 vs. 0.229). Nonetheless, when we examined predation rates across plots in which the density of mice varied naturally, total daily mortality rates declined as the density of mice increased. This pattern occurred because mortality from non-mouse predators decreased as the density of mice increased and overwhelmed increasing mortality from mice to drive the overall dynamics of the system. Analysis of the relationships between the density of mice and predation rates by mice as a function of the abundance of natural food in their environment revealed probable reasons for these conflicting results. We suggest that high local densities of mice deplete resources for larger, non-mouse predators, which preferentially occupy areas of few mice and high local food abundance. In these areas, songbirds may be faced with higher overall nest predation dominated by non-mouse predators. Mice thus influence nest predation rates through both direct and indirect pathways.

Keywords: eastern chipmunk, indirect effects, nest predation, predator-prey interactions, white-footed mouse

Abstracts by Session: Symposia, Oral, Poster
Abstracts Listed by Title/Reference Number
Schedule of Sessions in Chronological Order
Sr. Author and Co-Authors
Information updates, contact source
Snowbird 2000 Program Web Site
Snowbird Page on the ESA Web Site

This abstract is being presented at: 12:00 PM in session:
Oral Session #21: Small Mammal Population Ecology.