Abstract

Scatter hoarders are not able to defend their caches. A longer hoarding distance combined with lower cache density can reduce cache losses but increase the costs of hoarding and retrieving. Scatter hoarders arrange their cache density to achieve an optimal balance between hoarding costs and main cache losses. We conducted systematic cache sampling investigations to estimate the effects of food availability on cache patterns of Eurasian red squirrels (Sciurus vulgaris). This study was conducted over a five-year period at two sample plots in a Korean pine (Pinus koraiensis)-dominated forest with contrasting seed production patterns. During these investigations, the locations of nest trees were treated as indicators of squirrel space use to explore how space use affected cache pattern. The squirrels selectively hoarded heavier pine seeds farther away from seed-bearing trees. The heaviest seeds were placed in caches around nest trees regardless of the nest tree location, and this placement was not in response to decreased food availability. The cache density declined with the hoarding distance. Cache density was lower at sites with lower seed production and during poor seed years. During seed mast years, the cache density around nest trees was higher and invariant. The pine seeds were dispersed over a larger distance when seed availability was lower. Our results suggest that 1) animal space use is an important factor that affects food hoarding distance and associated cache densities, 2) animals employ different hoarding strategies based on food availability, and 3) seed dispersal outside the original stand is stimulated in poor seed years.

Highlights

  • Food hoarding is an adaptive strategy for animals to overcome periodic or unpredictable variations in food availability [1,2,3].Hoarders spatially redistribute their food resources in a temporal dimension, gaining a foraging advantage during periods of food scarcity [4,5,6]

  • The present study investigated cache density changes in response to animal space use and temporal and spatial variations in food availability in Eurasian red squirrels (Sciurus vulgaris) in a mixed broadleaf-conifer Korean pine (Pinus koraiensis) forest in northeast China

  • This result, which did not support prediction 1, revealed that the seed masses in the samples around nest trees were not affected by hoarding distance

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Summary

Introduction

Food hoarding is an adaptive strategy for animals to overcome periodic or unpredictable variations in food availability [1,2,3]. The present study investigated cache density changes in response to animal space use and temporal and spatial variations in food availability in Eurasian red squirrels (Sciurus vulgaris) in a mixed broadleaf-conifer Korean pine (Pinus koraiensis) forest in northeast China. Eurasian red squirrels usually scatter hoard Korean pine seeds on the ground around their nest trees [29]. Most nests were outside the pine parent stand, but the distances between the nests and pine seed-bearing trees were no longer than 250 m at the sample plots [30] These results were confirmed by subsequent radio-tracking observations during the four years (2008 to 2011). The interannual fluctuations and differences in seed production between sample plots allowed us to investigate the effect of food availability on cache patterns.

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