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Effects of Small Rodent and Large Mammal Exclusion on Seedling Recruitment in Costa Rica 1
DeMattia, Elizabeth A.; Rathcke, Beverly J.; Curran, Lisa M.; Aguilar, Reinaldo; Vargas, Orlando
2006-03
Citation:DeMattia, Elizabeth A.; Rathcke, Beverly J.; Curran, Lisa M.; Aguilar, Reinaldo; Vargas, Orlando (2006). "Effects of Small Rodent and Large Mammal Exclusion on Seedling Recruitment in Costa Rica 1 ." Biotropica 38(2): 196-202. <http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/74037>
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).