INVESTIGADORES
LOPEZ DE CASENAVE Javier Nestor
artículos
Título:
Granivore impact on soil-seed reserves in the central Monte desert, Argentina
Autor/es:
L. MARONE; B. E. ROSSI; J. LOPEZ DE CASENAVE
Revista:
FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY
Editorial:
Blackwell
Referencias:
Año: 1998 vol. 12 p. 640 - 645
ISSN:
0269-8463
Resumen:
Mechanisms of grass- and forb-seed input and output in the central Monte desert of Argentina were studied in 1995 to assess the impact that autumn-winter granivores, especially birds, may have on soil-seed reserves. The abundance of perennial-grass seeds in late summer soils (ca. 2,400 seeds/m2 or 0.36 g/m2) remained unchanged the following early spring (ca. 2,700 seeds/m2 or 0.39 g/m2), despite the incorporation of about 3,000 seeds/m2 or 0.71 g/m2 newly-produced grass seeds during autumn-winter. Grass seeds appeared to be heavily consumed, especially the medium-sized ones. The annual-forb seed bank was about the same size in late summer (ca. 5,500 seeds/m2 or 1.34 g/m2) as in early spring (ca. 6,500 seeds/m2 or 1.53 g/m2). Since forb-seed production had been relatively low (ca. 400 seeds/m2 or 0.12 g/m2), these seeds apparently suffered negligible postdispersal losses. This pattern of grass- and forb-seed loss coincides with the pattern of seed consumption by granivorous birds -on average, 93% of seed mass in bird stomachs was from grass seeds, while only 7% was from forb seeds. Further evidence of a major impact of bird foraging on seed reserves is that the mass of particular grass seeds that was lost from soils was positively correlated with the mass of such seeds in bird diets; and that the main target of bird consumption, i.e. medium-sized grass seeds, suffered the highest postdispersal loss. We conclude that autumn-winter granivores in the central Monte desert, particularly birds, mainly consume newly-produced grass seeds and that they might have major qualitative as well as quantitative impacts on soil-seed reserves.