Effects of small rodent and large mammal exclusion on seedling recruitment in Costa Rica

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Abstract

We examined whether the experimental exclusion of large mammalian and small rodent seed predators had differing effects on seedling recruitment under natural seed rain conditions. In both primary and late-successional secondary forested areas, exclosure experiments using natural seed densities were designed to assess seedling recruitment. To assess the differences in seedling recruitment, we monitored three exclosure treatments (1.2 m radius/1.5 m height) in two forest types (primary vs. late-successional secondary forest): (1) fenced exclosures that excluded large mammals; (2) fenced exclosures that excluded both large and small mammals; and (3) open controls. Within each exclosure treatment, we marked and identified all seedlings at the beginning of the experiment (February 2001), followed the marked seedlings' fate for a year, and then marked and identified all new seedlings after a year. Two preliminary findings were generated from these data: for some tree species, small rodents and large mammals have differential effects on seedling recruitment, and the effect of excluding mammals did not differ with habitat type (primary vs. late-successional secondary forest). These preliminary results highlight the need to examine further how the effects of small rodent and large mammal exclusion may affect species-specific seed predation and seedling recruitment in a variety of habitat/land use types (e.g., primary forest, late-successional forest, and early-successional forest). © 2005 by The Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation.

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DeMattia, E. A., Rathcke, B. J., Curran, L. M., Aguilar, R., & Vargas, O. (2006). Effects of small rodent and large mammal exclusion on seedling recruitment in Costa Rica. Biotropica, 38(2), 196–202. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1744-7429.2006.00117.x

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