Abstract

BackgroundConsumers should show strong spatial preferences when foraging in environments where food availability is highly heterogeneous and predictable. Postdispersal granivores face this scenario in most arid areas, where soil seed bank abundance and composition associates persistently with vegetation structure at small scales (decimetres to metres). Those environmental features should be exploited as useful pre-harvest information, at least to avoid patches predicted to be poor. However, we did not find the expected spatial association in the algarrobal of the central Monte desert by observing foraging seed-eating birds, a field technique influenced by how much they exploit visited patches. In this work we tested if the first stage of foraging by granivorous birds (patch visit, encounter or exploration) is positively associated with environmental indicators of patch quality by recording the removal of single seeds from 300 scattered experimental devices during seasonal trials. Spatial selectivity was analysed by comparing the structural characteristics of used vs. available microhabitats, and evaluated against bottom-up and top-down hypotheses based on our previous knowledge on local seed bank abundance, composition and dynamics. Their foraging activity was also explored for spatial autocorrelation and environmental correlates at bigger scales.ResultsPostdispersal granivorous birds were less selective in their use of foraging space than expected if microhabitat appearance were providing them relevant information to guide their search for profitable foraging patches. No microhabitat type, as defined by their vegetation structure and soil cover, remained safe from bird exploration. Analyses at bigger temporal and spatial scales proved more important to describe heterogeneity in seed removal.ConclusionsCloseness to tall trees, probably related to bird territoriality and reproduction or to their perception of predation risk, seemed to determine a first level of habitat selection, constraining explorable space. Then, microhabitat openness (rather than seed abundance) exerted some positive influence on which patches were more frequently visited among those accessible. Selective patterns by birds at small scales were closer to our predictions of a top-down spatial effect, with seed consumption creating or strengthening (and not responding to) the spatial pattern and dynamics of the seed bank.

Highlights

  • Consumers should show strong spatial preferences when foraging in environments where food availability is highly heterogeneous and predictable

  • Vegetation and soil characteristics The first three components of a Principal Components Analysis (PCA) on ten characteristics of vegetation and litter measured at the microhabitat scale retained 73% of the variability in the correlation matrix (Table 2)

  • The second (PC2) was associated with tree cover, and the third (PC3) with the rest of perennial vegetation: grasses to the positive and low shrubs to the negative values. These components can be associated with the soil seed bank according to previous local results based on sampling microhabitats categorized a priori at field: total seed abundance in the soil should be associated with positive values of PC1 and PC2, and grass seed abundance to positive values of PC3 (Table 2, Fig. 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Consumers should show strong spatial preferences when foraging in environments where food availability is highly heterogeneous and predictable Postdispersal granivores face this scenario in most arid areas, where soil seed bank abundance and composition associates persistently with vegetation structure at small scales (decimetres to metres). The central Monte desert (Argentina) is no exception: seeds and litter consistently accumulate under shrubs and trees [21,22,23,24] In these habitats, visual foragers such as granivorous birds should increase their foraging success by exploiting woody cover and litter, conspicuous environmental cues of resource abundance, as pre-harvest or prior information accumulating their previous experiences and evolutionary history [2, 11, 16]

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