| Literature DB >> 26791932 |
José Hernán Sarasola1,2, Juan Ignacio Zanón-Martínez1,2, Andrea Silvina Costán1,2, William J Ripple3.
Abstract
Large "hypercarnivorous" felids are recognized for their role as apex predators and hence as key elements in food webs and ecosystem functioning through competition and depredation. Here we show that cougars (Puma concolor), one of the largest and the most widely ranging apex felid predators with a strictly carnivorous diet, could also be effective secondary long distance seed dispersers, potentially establishing direct and non-herbivore mediated interactions with plant species at the bottom of the food web. Cougars accidently ingest and disseminate large amounts of seeds (31,678 seeds in 123 scats) of plant species initially consumed by their main prey, the Eared Dove Zenaida auriculata. The germination potential of seeds for the three plant species most abundantly found in cougar scats (19,570 seeds) was not significantly different from that observed in seeds obtained from dove gizzards, indicating that seed passage through cougar guts did not affect seed germination. Considering the estimated cougar density in our study area, dispersal of seeds by cougars could allow a mean, annual seed spread of ~5,000 seeds per km(2). Our results demonstrate that strictly carnivorous, felid predators could have broad and overlooked ecological functions related to ecosystem structuring and functioning.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26791932 PMCID: PMC4726145 DOI: 10.1038/srep19647
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Estimates of mean annual seed field deposition (±SE) for three herbaceous species as a result of secondary dispersal of seeds by cougars.
| Plant species | Seeds in scats | Seeds per scat | Total seed deposition |
|---|---|---|---|
| Common Lambsquarter | 10,006 | 81.35 (±16.18) | 2,613 (±520) |
| Panic grass | 6,318 | 51.37 (±12.34) | 1,650 (±396) |
| Sorghum | 3,246 | 26.39 (±4.29) | 848 (±138) |
| Total | 19,570 | 5,110 (±1,054) |
aMean number of seeds in scats (N = 123 scats).
bSeeds per scat × 0.088 cougars/km2 × 365 days, with defecation rate taken to be one scat per cougar per day.
Figure 1(a) Cougar photographed by camera traps in the study area and (b) relationship between total numbers of seeds for three plant species found in cougar scat and the percentage of eared doves remains in them visually estimated from dry and disaggregated scat contents.
Figure 2Mean (±SD) germination potential of seeds of three plant species at each of the two steps along the seed dispersal pathway (i.e. eared doves and cougars).
Differences in germination potential between seeds obtained from dove gizzards and those collected from cougar scat were not significant (P > 0.25 in all cases).
Figure 3Field temporal deposition of seeds through secondary seed dispersal by cougars.
Values of seeds in cougar scats collected in the study area are expressed as the mean number of seeds/scat (±SE) in each of field sampling occasions.