INVESTIGADORES
MORÁN LÓPEZ Teresa
artículos
Título:
Landscape effects on jay foraging behavior decrease acorn dispersal services in dehesas
Autor/es:
TERESA MORÁN LÓPEZ; CESAR LUIS ALONSO; MARIO DÍAZ ESTEBAN
Revista:
ACTA OECOLOGICA-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY
Editorial:
GAUTHIER-VILLARS/EDITIONS ELSEVIER
Referencias:
Año: 2015 vol. 69 p. 52 - 64
ISSN:
1146-609X
Resumen:
Dehesas are savanna-like, oak woodlands with a high conservation value that are threatened by chronicregeneration failure. Acorn dispersal by Eurasian jays (Garrulus glandarius) is vital for oak recruitmentalthough jay preference for continuous forests may condition this mutualism in dehesas. In this study, weevaluated whether the acorn dispersal services provided by jays to oaks differed between both habitatsand assessed factors that could potentially drive such differences. We (1) monitored acorn removal ratesat feeders located close to focal trees in a holm oak (Quercus ilex) forest and in a nearby dehesa over a 6-year period; (2) measured the spatial traits of focal trees and their acorn production; and (3) monitoreddispersal distances and microhabitat selection for acorn caching during 2012.Our results indicated that jays were able to exploit dehesas located close to forest habitats, but did soinfrequently and as a secondary food source (acorn removal rates were six times lower in dehesa than innearby forests). This likely occurred because dehesas did not offer new or more abundant food sources on alandscape scale. In forests, tree choice was driven by crop traits while in dehesas it was driven by spatiallocation. Jays preferentially foraged at dehesa trees near forest patches and aggregated to other trees,regardless of crop traits. Acorns were mobilized four times closer in dehesas, and seeds were preferentiallycached in unsuitable microhabitats for seedling establishment. Our results suggest that (i) distance to foresthabitats and tree isolation effects on jay foraging behavior reduces their dispersal services in dehesas ascompared to nearby forests, and (ii) practices designed to enhance acorn dispersal by jays in this habitatshould focus on the maintenance or creation of forest patches interspersed within dehesa areas.