Effects of an invasive ant and native predators on cotton rat recruitment and survival

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Abstract

We used the imported red-fire ant (Solenopsis invicta; hereafter fire ant) and hispid cotton rat (Sigmodon hispidus) as model species to address the population-level effects of an invasive ant on a semiprecocial small mammal. We stocked cotton rats into 8 enclosures, implementing a 2-way factorial design with predator (ambient or excluded) and fire ant (ambient or reduced) treatments as factors. We trapped monthly from June 2012 to June 2013 and calculated monthly recruitment and survival. Rats in enclosures with ambient predators had a risk of mortality approximately 2 times greater than rats in enclosures with predators excluded. The risk of mortality was 3 and 4.5 times greater for female and male cotton rats, respectively, in enclosures with ambient fire ants and predators compared to enclosures with reduced fire ants and excluded predators. We found no effects on recruitment. Our results indicate that native predators had the greatest influence on cotton rat populations. Nevertheless, in the absence of other predators, the effects of fire ants on cotton rat survival are compensatory.

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Long, A. K., Conner, L. M., Smith, L. L., & Mccleery, R. A. (2015). Effects of an invasive ant and native predators on cotton rat recruitment and survival. Journal of Mammalogy, 96(6), 1135–1141. https://doi.org/10.1093/jmammal/gyv121

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