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Species Diversity of Seed-Eating Desert Rodents in Sand Dune Habitats Author(s): James H. Brown Source: Ecology, Vol. 54, No. 4 (Jul., 1973), pp. 775-787 Published by: Ecological Society of America Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1935672 . Accessed: 20/06/2011 15:26 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp. JSTOR's Terms and Conditions of Use provides, in part, that unless you have obtained prior permission, you may not download an entire issue of a journal or multiple copies of articles, and you may use content in the JSTOR archive only for your personal, non-commercial use. Please contact the publisher regarding any further use of this work. Publisher contact information may be obtained at . http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=esa. . Each copy of any part of a JSTOR transmission must contain the same copyright notice that appears on the screen or printed page of such transmission. JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. Ecological Society of America is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Ecology. http://www.jstor.org SPECIES DIVERSITY OF SEED-EATING DESERT RODENTS IN SAND DUNE HABITATS' JAMES H. BROWN Department of Biology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City 84112 Abstract. The seed-eating rodent faunas were sampled on 18 dunes of semistabilized, winddrifted sand in eastern California, Nevada, and western Utah. These dunes were similar in general appearance and in the form and spacing of vegetation, yet the number of common species of granivorous rodents ranged from 1 to 5. The faunas of all dunes were characterized by a regular spacing of body sizes, and the difference in size between coexisting species was inversely related to the number of species present. Differences in species diversity between dunes can be attributed to ecological, biogeographic, and evolutionary processes. A common pool of species had equal opportunity to colonize 13 of the dunes. The numbers of species inhabiting these dunes are determined primarily by ecological factors. Species diversity is most closely correlated with the predictable amount of annual rainfall, the best available estimate of the abundance of seeds. At least three dunes apparently are biogeographically depauperate; biogeographic barriers have prevented colonization of particular species that probably could exist on those dunes. Two of the dunes occur at high altitudes and these appear to be depauperate in an evolutionary sense; although these dunes seem to be capable of supporting additional rodent species, it is likely that no existing species possess the adaptations necessary to colonize them. INTRODUCTION The number of species that occur in a particular habitat depends on the interaction between ecological, biogeographic, and evolutionary processes. Speciation and immigration provide species with the opportunity to colonize the habitat. The ability of these potential colonists to exist and coexist in the habitat determines the number and identity of species which actually will be found there. In order to understand how these processes influence species diversity, it is necessary to study natural communities where the effects of specific variables can be analyzed by observation or experimental manipulation. The works of MacArthur and MacArthur (1961), MacArthur (1964), Paine (1966), Pianka (1967), Sanders (1969), Rosenzweig and Winakur (1969), Janzen (1970), and others are encouraging beginnings, but of these authors only Pianka has attempted to analyze simultaneously the effects of ecological, biogeographic, and evolutionary variables on the diversity of species in continental habitats. Pianka concluded that ecological parameters (particularly spatial heterogeneity of vegetation) were the most important determinants of species diversity of North American lizards in desert flatland habitats. More studies on other groups of organisms are essential if we hope to discover general patterns of variation in species diversity and to understand the mechanisms which produce these patterns. In this paper I describe factors that determine the number of species of seed-eating rodents found in sand dune habitats in the deserts of the southwestern United States. These rodent communities are ideal 'Received April 7, 1972; accepted September 11, 1972. for such a study. Like most desert ecosystems, sand dunes have a small number of rather sparsely distributed plant and animal species; relative to the rest of the biota, rodents are abundant and diverse, and most of them are ecologically similar in that they spend the day in burrows and emerge at night to forage for the dry seeds which comprise the bulk of their diets. From one to five or more species of seedeating rodents are found on sand dunes in the North American deserts. Sand dunes are distinctive, geographically widespread habitats remarkably similar in general characteristics and appearance, although they vary greatly in parameters (such as size, degree of isolation, climate, and number and identity of plant species) which might be expected to affect rodent species diversity. This paper discusses the extrinsic ecological, biogeographic, and evolutionary factors that determine the diversity of seed-eating rodent species. A second paper will describe food resource utilization and other mechanisms that enable these ecologically similar species to coexist (Brown and Lieberman 1973). HABITATS, RODENTS, METHODS Sand dunes occur as widely dispersed patches of distinctive habitat in the arid areas of western North America. A special combination of soil, wind, and topography is required for the formation of dunes. They occur most frequently in sheltered areas on the leeward side of dry lakes. Only large, semistabilized dunes were chosen for the present study. These consist of hills of wind-drifted sand held in place by isolated clumps of shrubby vegetation. Most of these plants, regardless of their species, are remarkably JAMES H. BROWN 776 cause of their wide geographic distribution the habitats differed in climate, particularly in the severity of the winters and the amount of precipitation. There were some differences in size and composition of the sand particles, and this, together with the climate, apparently accounted for differences in vegetation between the dunes. There was considerable variation in the identity, species diversity, and density of the perennial shrubs, but less variability in their size and shape. In general the northern (Great Basin Desert) dunes received more rainfall and had greater plant species diversity than the southern dunes of the Mojave and Colorado deserts. Sarcobatus baileyi and A triplex canescens tended to be the most abundant species of plants on the northern dunes, and if any species could be said to predominate on the southern dunes it was Larrea divaricata. 14 5o~~~~~~~~~~~' T84/ [SER CREA r OS 6~~~~~ j. 7 18 Ecology, Vol. 54, No. 4 17 The seed-eating rodents Fid 1. Map of southwestern United States showing sand dunes sampled in relation to the major desert areas ( stippled ) and the geographic ranges of D . merriami (enclosed by heavy dashed line) and D. deserti (light dashed line) . Open circles (sites 1-13 ) indicate dunes to which approximately equal numbers of species have had access; solid circles (14-16) represent dunes in iso- lated desert basins to which some species have not had biogeographic access; solid triangles ( 17-18 ) denote dunes located at elevations above the attitudinal ranges of several species. similar in form and height; their vegetative parts tend to be roughly hemispherical in shape and between 15 and 125 cm in height. Between these shrubs are extensive areas of bare, wind-drifted sand. Occasionally after one or more good rains small herbs and grasses grow there, but most of these are ephemeral and within a few months they die and are uprooted by the wind or covered by drifting sand. I have sampled the rodent communities of 18 se1istabilized sand dune habitats in an area of the southwestern United States which includes extensive and Great Basin wn-fed , portions of the Coloradob deserts (Fig. 1, Table 1). The wind-drifted sand and the form, height, and spacing of the perennial plants, made all of these dunes quite similar in general appearance (Fig. 2), but they differed in many respects. The dunes varied in size, from dune 2, which covered only about 0U25 kM2, to dune 12, which encompassed an area of hundreds of square kilometers. However, these were exceptional and the other dune habitats ranged in size from approximately 1 to 20 km2. Be- Sampling methods.-The rodent fauna of the dunes was sampled by trapping with "Museum Special" dead traps. I had hoped that these traps would sample all species with approximately equal efficiency; however, some individuals of Dipodomys desert, the largest species, were able to break away from them. The traps were placed in sets of four (positioned as described by Brown and Lieberman 1973) spaced approximately 10 m apart, in and around the perennial shrubs. Dunes were normally trapped for two successive nights during the summer months; at least 140 traps were set each night and all traps were moved to new locations on the second night. Most of the dunes were sampled only once, but dune 10 was sampled twice and dune 7 four times during different years and different seasons. Although absolute and relative abundance of the rodent species fluctuated somewhat, species composition and diversity appeared to remain relatively constant. The species.-During the present study 18 species of rodents were captured (Table 2). Three of these species are not primarily granivorous and have been excluded from the analyses. The grasshopper mice (Onychomys torridus and 0. leucogaster) are largely carnivorous, preying on arthropods and less frequently on small vertebrates. The antelope ground squirrel (Ammospermophilus leucurus) is an omnivore which feeds on green vegetation, arthropods, small vertebrates, and carrion as well as seeds. The remaining 15 species are largely granivorous and their populations obviously fluctuate in response to the abundance of seed crop. Most of the species and individuals belong to the family Heteromyidae, the group of North American rodents that shows the most obvious specializations for desert life. The genera, Dipodomys (kangaroo rats), Microdipodops (kangaroo mice), and Perognathus (pocket mice), SPECIES DIVERSITY Summer 1973 TABLE 777 IN DESERT RODENTS 1. Location, sampling effort, and species diversity for the sand dune localities Rodent species Nevada, Humboldt Co., Pronto, 29 km WSW Winnemucca, 1290 m. Nevada, Pershing Co., 15 km NE Lovelock, 1290 m. Nevada, Pershing Co., 34 km WNW Lovelock, 1250 m. Nevada, Pershing Co., 11 km S Lovelock, 1190 m. Nevada, Churchill Co., Sand Mountain, 37 km SE Fallon, 1260 m. Nevada, Mineral Co., 21 km S Mina, 1370 m. Nevada, Esmeralda Co., Fishlake Valley, 21 km. N Dyer, 1490 m. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 California, Inyo Co., Owens Lake, 7 km NW Keeler, 1190 m. California, San Bernadino Co., 25 km SW Baker, 430 m. California, San Bernadino Co., Kelso Dunes, 8 km S Kelso, 670 m. 8 9 10 California, Riverside Co., 3 km NE Indio, 20 m. California, Imperial Co., Algodones Dunes, 8 km W Glamis, 90 m. California, San Diego Co., 6 km ENE Borrego Springs, 150 m. Nevada, Elko Co., 11 km NE Montello, 1490 m. Utah, Tooele Co., 2 km NE Dugway Proving Ground, 1460 m. Nevada, Nye Co., 13 km S Currant, 1460 m. Utah, Kane Co., Coral Pink Sand Dunes State Park, 16 km W Kanab, 1830 m. California, Mono Co., NE shore of Mono Lake, 1980 m. 11 12 13 14 15 16 1718 aH Date Location Dune = -Zpi loge pi where pi are proportions Sample trap nights Aug. 3-4, 1970 Aug. 1, 1970 July 30-31, 1970 July 13-14, 1971 Aug. 5-6, 1970 Sept. 1-2, 1970 Sept. 5-13, 1970 May 29-30, 1970 July 15, 1968 Feb. 19-20, 1968 Sept. 13-14, 1970 Mar. 27-28, 1971 May 8-9, 1970 May 1969 July 19-20, 1971 July 21-22, 1971 April 23-24, 1971 Aug. 19-20, 1971 Aug. 16, 1971 Aug. 30-31, 1971 Aug. 9-10, 1971 Sept. 3-4, 1970 Individuals caught Total Common (> 5%) Diversity(H) 280 41 8 5 1.80 140 59 6 5 1.41 280 50 5 5 1.46 300 23 5 4 1.42 280 49 7 4 1.33 280 69 7 4 1.12 1050 114 6 5 1.47 400 200 94 50 7 5 5 4 1.54 1.40 250 42 5 5 1.50 300 30 3 2 0.74 300 10 3 3 0.90 300 120 29 12 2 1 1 1 0.15 0.0 300 2 1 1 0.0 300 4 1 1 0.0 300 9 1 1 0.0 280 26 3 3 0.54 140 14 3 3 0.66 280 45 4 2 0.78 280 21 5 3 1.30 280 61 7 4 1.33 of each species in the sample. have efficient kidneys that enable them to maintain water balance on relatively dry diets, and fur-lined cheek pouches used for collecting and transporting seeds. In addition the kangaroo rats and kangaroo mice are saltatorial and largely bipedal, which apparently enables them to forage efficiently over large areas and to avoid predators in open terrain. The next most diverse group of rodents belongs to the family Cricetidae (the main family of New World rats and mice), represented by two genera, Peromyscus (deer mice; to avoid confusion with Perognathus, Peromyscus will not be abbreviated) and Reithrodontomys (harvest mice). A single species of chipmunk (Eutamias minimum), a member of the family Sciuridae (squirrels and ground squirrels), was taken on one dune. With the exception of Eutamias minimum,which is diurnal and frequently climbs and forages in the branches of desert shrubs, the seed-eating rodents are quite similar in habits and general ecology. They spend the day inactive in burrows in the sand, and emerge at dusk to forage on the surface of the ground. Although some seeds are harvested from the plants during the fruiting season, through most of the year seeds are collected individually from the substrate. When seeds are abundant large numbers are collected and stored in burrows or in shallow caches in the sand. All species except those of the genus Dipodomys may enter torpor or hibernation during periods of food scarcity or climatic severity. None of the species are restricted in their distributions to sand dune habitats, although D. deserti, M. Ecology, Vol. 54, No. 4 JAMES H. BROWN 778 ,. ,.!:Substant,.) ..:...... .. . :.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.: . : : : , : . ... . . : ' : .: . . . .. :.: ... : * ~~~~~~~~~~ ... ::.... ::.:. ::. .. ... ....'..... .. .... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.:. ........ como spce of sedetn roens Blow dun 8 in eatr Clifri whreto .. seiswrcomn : SPECIES DIVERSITY Summer 1973 TABLE Species Dipodomys deserti D. panamintinus D. microps D. ordi D. merriani Microdipodops pallidus M. megacephalus Perognathus parvus P. penicillatus P. longimembris Peromyscus maniculatus Peromyscus crinitus Peromyscus truei Reithrodontomys megalotis Eutamias minimus Total seed-eating rodents Onychomnys torridus 0. leucogaster Anunospernmophilus leuicuruis Total rodents Body weight (g) 100.6 80.4 58.5 48.9 37.6 12.5 12.0 16.9 12.8 7.1 18.1 15.8 23 .8 8 .6 33 .5 779 IN DESERT RODENTS 2. Composition of the rodent samples of the sand dune localities Dune 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 3 1 8 8 4 2 21 20 1 10 40 11 12 13 2 4 9 14 15 16 17 18 1 1 1 9 14 11 6 10 7 5 2 29 6 47 7 6 1 98 68 22 9 11 1 22 10 8 1 17 1 7 29 3 12 2 6 1 4 6 26 21 5 3 4 6 1 3 2 2 1 67 38 1 1 21 2 9 1 41 1 59 6 42 I 66 50 4 23 10 1 3 49 4 69 2 1 299 2 30 2 301 I 33 1 2 2 10 2 41 1 2 4 9 26 14 45 3 21 2 3 61 4 54 33 53 71 pallidus, and P. penicillatus are normally found only on friable soils. The species range in body size from P. longimembris, which weighs about 7 g, to D. deserti, approximately 100 g. A variety of mammalian, avian, and reptilian predators are known to take these rodents, but predation does not appear to have much effect on the rodent populations. Measurement of species diversity.-All students of species diversity are faced with the problem of how to measure or represent diversity. The usual solution to this problem is either simply to count the total number of species present or to use some diversity index that gives the moderately abundant species in a sample more weight than the rare ones. Because I was interested in the number of ways the seed resources were utilized by rodents in each habitat, my initial inclination was to use simply the total number of species. However, it was obvious that samples from some dunes contained one or more species so rare that they were either transients dispersing through the habitat or resident species so scarce that they were not important constituents of the community. These rare species were excluded by counting only those species, except for D. desert and D. panamintinus, which comprised 5% or more of the individuals of seed-eating rodents in a sample. Dipodomys deserti, the largest species, was counted whenever it was present for three reasons: ( 1) as one would expect from its size, its populations were often less dense than those of smaller species; (2) as mentioned earlier, some individuals escaped from the traps, so that, relative to the smaller species, D. deserti was underrepresented in the samples; (3) D. deserti occurs only on sandy soils, and there is little doubt that it is a permanent and important member Total 123 1 8 100 192 114 29 4 6 109 140 2 1 21 3 853 37 4 2 12 42 2 4 9 26 14 48 25 61 896 of any dune community where it is present. D. panamintinus, which occurred on only one dune, is almost as large as D. deserti and was treated similarly. I feel that the number of common species derived as described above is an unambiguous and biologically reasonable measure of species diversity. However, it should be mentioned that I have computed Shannon-Wiener diversity indices (H = -1pi loge pi; where pi is the proportion of the sample that are members of species i) for the faunas of all of the dune habitats (Table 1) and these indices are closely correlated (r - 0.94) with the number of common species. Environmental parameters climatic data used for each dune Climate.-The locality are those collected at the nearest U.S. Weather Bureau station at a similar elevation. Proximity to a weather station was one criterion used in the selection of dunes. All available records since 1951 were used to provide data for the analyses; in all cases the statistics used are based on 14 to 20 years of complete records. Perennial shrubs.-Measurements of plant density, foliage height diversity, and plant species diversity were obtained by the following sampling procedure. Either 5 or 10 straight-line transects, each 25 m in length, were dropped at random in the habitat sampled by trapping. The identity and height of each plant touching the line was recorded. Because the seed-eating rodents are primarily terrestrial, a logarithmic series of height categories (0-8, 8-16, 1632, 32-64, 64-128, > 128 cm) was used for the analysis of foliage height diversity. The ShannonWiener diversity index was used to measure foliage height diversity and plant species diversity. It is im- JAMES H. BROWN 780 portant to emphasize that all measurements of plant parameters are for perennial shrubs only. Significant numbers of herbs and grasses were present only on those dunes where there had been good recent rains, and these were ignored. Soils.-Measurements of soil hardness and grain size distribution were obtained for most of the dunes. It was found that they showed little variability and bore no relation to rodent species diversity, so they were discontinued. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Distribution of species and body sizes Each of the dunes sampled was inhabited by from I to 5 common species of seed-eating rodents (Table 1). The first insights into the determinants of diversity are provided by the recurring patterns of species composition and body size distribution which characterized the faunas of the dunes. Seven species. D. desert, D. ordi, D. merriami, M. pallidus, P. longimembris, Peromyscus inaniculatus, and R. megalotis, were common on four or A I rj 6 .6 2 r^ 56 m r`1 r Jo i6 6 rL r~l m m o6 r^ v6 ii _6 rr 8 16 w 31012 - 13 14- v6 v 6 16- r^ 17 18- r1, Wm ,r%, m6 r4m A ^ do di 1, t BODYWEIGHT (grams) FIG. 3. Distribution of body sizes in the seed-eating rodent faunas of the various sand dunes. Shaded symbols represent common species; unshaded symbols, rare species. The width of the symbols is simply for illustration and does not represent variation in body weight. The body weights indicated are the means for all individuals of each species from all localities. Brown and Lieberman ( 1973 ) found no evidence of geographic variation in body weight (character displacement) in relation to number or identity of coexisting species. Species identities can be read from body weights and abundances in Table 2. Ecology, Vol. 54, No. 4 more of the dunes. These species formed the basic pool from which the faunas of the dunes were derived. They range in body size from 7 to 100 g. One of the most conspicuous features of the faunas of the dunes was the remarkably regular spacing of body sizes which occurred on each dune (Fig. 3). With remarkably few exceptions, common species that coexisted on the same dune differed in weight by a ratio (larger/smaller) of at least 1.5. Species differing in weight by a ratio of less than 1.5 occurred together less frequently than expected if coexistence were independent of body size, and pairs of species for which the weight ratio is greater than 1.5 coexisted more frequently than expected by chance (;t,2 = 7.24; P < 0.01). Also, the difference between pairs of adjacent species in the body size spectrum was inversely related to the number of species present. Thus when the number of common species inhabiting a dune was 5, 4, 3, or 2, the adjacent pairs of species differed in size by a ratio which averaged 2.0, 2.3, 2.7, or 2.7 respectively. Even those species which were rare (less than 5 percent of the total sample) tended to fall within size ranges not represented by other species on that dune. The ability of rodent species to coexist in sand dune habitats appears to depend on their being of quite different sizes, and the fewer species a dune can support, the more different in size they must be. These patterns suggest that coexistence is achieved by the division of some environmental resource on the basis of size. The most reasonable hypothesis is that the rodents differentially utilize the sizes of seeds available in their habitats. We have tested and verified this hypothesis (Brown and Lieberman 1973); small rodents feed on small seeds and large ones feed on large seeds. However, there is a great deal of overlap in the sizes of seeds taken by pairs of coexisting species of similar size, and subdivision of the seed resources on the basis of size alone is probably not sufficient to account for coexistence. The faunas of the dunes also showed regular patterns of species composition (Table 2). On this basis the dunes could be divided into two groups. Dunes 14 to 18 were similar in that their faunas consisted of D. ordi, Peromyscus maniculatus, and sometimes one or two additional species. All of these 5 dunes lie outside the geographic ranges of D. merriami and D. deserti (Fig. 1), and their faunas are quite different from those of the other dunes, which occur within the ranges of these two species. Dunes 1 to 13 were all inhabited by D. deserti and, if two or more species were common, by D. merriami (however, on dune 5 D. merriami, although present, was rare). These were also the only dunes where M. pallidus occurred, and it was found on all but two of the dunes within its geographic range. Later I will Summer 1973 SPECIES DIVERSITY IN DESERT RODENTS show that these two groups of dunes, which could be distinguished on the basis of differences in species composition, also differed in other respects related to rodent species diversity. Biogeographical or evolutionary explanations are required to account for the differences in the composition and diversity of rodent species between dunes 1 to 13 on the one hand, and 14 to 18 on the other. Two other patterns were apparent as a result of simply examining the rodent faunas of the dunes. First, on dunes I to 13 species were absent or "dropped out" in a fairly regular sequence as rodent species diversity decreased. Reithrodontomnys mnegalotis and D. ordi were the first species to drop out; neither was found on dunes with fewer than four species. These were followed by M. pallidus, Peronyscus naflniculaltus,and P. Iongimemubris. Finally D. m'nerriatni dropped out, leaving only D. deserti, the largest species, which was found on all of the dunes. Second, in several cases a species that was absent was -replaced" by another species of similar size. The most spectacular cases involved three species weighing 12 to 13 g. Microdipodops pallidus was found on most of the dunes within its geographic range, where it was the only species of this size, but on three dunes outside its range other species of the same size were found; M. inegacephalus occurred on dunes I and 18 and P. pen icillatus was present on dune 9. (80 g) apparently "replaced" D. D. punainintinus (lcserti (100 g) on dune 18. A similar situation involved P. ion ginenembris (7.1 g) and R. inegalotis (8.6 g). which were never common on the same dune. These observations support the previous genTABLL eralizations about the influence of body size on the composition of these desert rodent communities. Apparently the coexistence of seed-eating rodents in sand dune habitats depends more on the body sizes of species than on the identity of the species. Ecological determinants of species diversity Dunes I to 13 lie within the altitudinal and geographic ranges of P. ion gitnemnbris, R. inegalotis, Peroinyscus inaniculatus, D. inerriatni, and D. deserti. Even when these species were absent from dunes they were usually abundant in habitats adjacent to them or only a few miles away. For example, P. ion gimnembrisand D. inerrialni were abundant on the harder soils immediately surrounding many of the dunes in southern California which they did not inhabit. Microdipodops pallidus and D. ordi, which were common on several of the dunes in the Great Basin, do not have geographic ranges that include the dunes in the Mojave and Colorado deserts of southern California. However, other species of the genera Perognath us, Dipodomnys, and Peromnyscus occur in the deserts of Southern California but not in the Great Basin. These species have had the biogeographic potential to colonize the southern dunes and one of them has done so: P. pen icillatus was common on dune 9, where it was apparently a geographic "replacement" for Al. pallidus. I conclude that at least six species, including a wide spectrum of body sizes, have had the opportunity to colonize all of these 13 dunes. The absence of some of these species from several of the dunes must be attributed to ecological characteristics of the dunes, rather than 3. Some characteristics of the sand dune habitats Annual precipitation (mm) Common Perennial plants -- - Dune rodent species . 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 I) 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 5 5 5 4 4 4 4.75 2 3 1 1 1 1 3 3 2 3 4 191 138 138 138 119 114 120 125 58 58 69 52 80 182 170 105 302 321 -a -2 131 91 91 91 77 73 66 57 23 23 28 21 37 119 116 52 214 203 72 45 45 45 36 31 11 -11 -12 -12 -14 -10 - 6 56 62 - 1 125 85 a - - Sand _-- Species PSDa Density', FHDc Hardness1l 6 6 4 4 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 3 4 1 4 5 1.36 1.03 1.04 0.86 1.26 0.57 0.62 0.76 0.66 0.35 1.00 0.48 0.66 0.95 1.22 0 1.22 1.18 7.6 4.6 3.4 5.0 2.6 7.0 4.9 10.5 5.8 8.6 3.4 3.7 1.6 4.0 12.2 4.2 5.6 8.0 0.67 0.95 0.45 0.83 1.03 0.96 1.18 1.07 1.15 0.65 0.88 0.73 1.03 1.26 1.23 1.06 1.55 1.00 2.16 2.14 2.31 2.72 2.67 3.74 2.82 2.79 2.60 aPlant species diversity = -) pi loge pi. of plants intersected by a straight line 25 u-. in lengtlh eFoliage height diversity - -"pj loge pi; heigiht categories as in text '1100m/mi penetration by stand.trd pointed metal stake e lmesh size; measured with gr.aded series of sieves I Numibcr 781 2.72 3.25 2.85 2.63 2.05 Grain sizeO 2.99 3.39 3.64 3.35 3.61 3.30 3.94 3.67 3.07 -- 3.16 3.69 3.18 JAMES H. BROWN 782 to biogeographic barriers that have prevented colonization. If we consider only these 13 dunes where approximately equal numbers of species have had the opportunity to colonize, we should discover the environmental parameters that determine how many rodent species they can support. Several variables have been tested for their relationship to rodent species diversity; these include dune size, soil characteristics, measurements of the amount and predictability of precipitation, diversity of plant species, plant density, and foliage height diversity (Table 3). These were chosen on the basis of my own intuition or because other students of desert rodent ecology (especially Rosenzweig and Winakur 1969) suggested that they influence species diversity. Somewhat surprisingly. the number of rodent species was independent of dune size. In fact, the smallest dune (dune 2) was inhabited by five common and one rare species, and only a single species was present on the largest dune (dune 12). This lack of correlation can be attributed to the fact that none of the dune-dwelling rodents are found only in sand dune habitats. Therefore, although the dunes have a patchy distribution, most species have ready access to them and diversity is not related to area as it is on islands. Neither soil particle size, soil strength, vegetation density, nor foliage height diversity were correlated with the number of common rodent species. Those environmental parameters with which the number of common rodent species were correlated, were measures of annual precipitation and plant species diversity. The number of rodent species was equally well correlated (r = 0.84, Fig. 4) with two measures of the predictable amount of annual rain5 c0 0 0 n 4- o00 0 A*-203 lii Ecology, Vol. 54, No. 4 fall (K -- a and x - 2a of annual precipitation, or the amount of rain which can be expected 5 years out of 6 and 39 years out of 40 respectively). This correlation was somewhat better than that relating the number of rodent species to mean annual rainfall (r = 0.80). The number of rodent species was also questionably correlated with plant species diversity (r = 0.56). However, when multiple regression analysis was used to eliminate the variability in rodent species diversity owing to rainfall, then there was no relation On the -0.17). to plant species diversity (rrz., other hand, when the variability owing to plant species diversity was removed, the number of rodent species was still correlated with x - a of annual rainfall (r,. - 0.79). This suggests that rainfall influences the diversity of both seed-eating rodents and perennial shrubs, but that the diversity of shrubs has no direct effect on the diversity of rodents. The apparent effect of precipitation on the diversity of seed-eating desert rodents is not as surprising as it seems at first. Germination and seed production by desert annuals and seed production by perennials is known to be highly dependent on rainfall (Went 1948, 1955, Went and Westergaard 1949, Beatley 1967 and 1969). Thus, the amount and predictability of annual rainfall should provide an accurate estimate of the size and predictability of the annual seed crop, which it was impractical to measure directly. Diversity of coexisting seed-eating rodents in these sand dune habitats apparently depends largely on the annual production of seeds in the habitat. The diversity of rodents is also influenced by the unpredictable nature of desert rains and the fact that in years of low precipitation there is little or no seed production. Many areas of the Mojave and Colorado Deserts receive sufficient precipitation to produce a good crop of annuals only every 2nd or 3rd year on the average. For example, in 2 years out of the last 20, Brawley, California, the Weather Bureau station nearest dune 12, received less than 2.5 mm of precipitation. aZ C,, ~. 0000 0 150 100 50 PRECIPITATION (millimeters) X-oa of ANNUAL FIG. 4. Relation of rodent species diversity to a measure of the predictable amount of precipitation-in this case the mean minus one standard deviation of annual precipitation,or the amount of rain that can be expected 5 years out of every 6. Symbols as in Fig. 1. 0 It is not difficult to account for the observed variability in rodent species diversity as a function of the abundance and predictability of the seed crop. Coexisting seed-eating rodents on these sand dunes apparently subdivide the seeds and avoid competitive exclusion mostly by feeding on seeds of different sizes and by foraging in different places (Brown and Lieberman 1973). As the seed production of a habitat decreases, the availability of seeds of appropriate sizes and in appropriate places for a particular rodent species also decreases, and eventually some threshold is reached below which that species can no longer persist in the habitat. The exclusion of species from a habitat as a result of diminution of resources need not depend on interspecific competition, but com- Summer 1973 SPECIES DIVERSITY petition between species will facilitate their exclusion. Competition does seem to have an important effect on the coexistence of seed-eating rodent species on sand dunes. The best evidence for this is the variation in body sizes as a function of species diversity; the difference in body size between the most similar pairs of species increases as the number of coexisting species decreases (Fig. 3). The predictability of the seed crop seems to affect rodent species diversity by determining the minimum levels of seed availability. Thus the mean annual rainfall minus some measure of its variability (standard deviation) is highly correlated with the number of rodent species, and measures of variability per se show no relation to rodent species diversity. Populations of seed-eating desert rodents apparently reach minimal levels after seasons of low rainfall and little seed production. If the population of a species in some habitat is so low that it frequently becomes locally extinct in years of low productivity, then that species should evolve habitat selection to avoid recolonization of that habitat, even during periods of high productivity. Thus it is the minimum predictable level of resources which should (and apparently does) have the greatest effect in determining the number of species which can coexist in a habitat. Species that occur in several types of habitat in areas where resources are abundant should inhabit fewer kinds of habitats as resources diminish. This is precisely what happens to the desert rodents. In the high-rainfall (and presumably productive) Great Basin Desert species such as P. longimembris, R. megalotis, Peromyscus maniculatus, and D. inerriami are common in a number of habitats including sand dunes. In the Mojave and Colorado Deserts, which receive less precipitation and presumably produce fewer seeds, these species still occur but they are restricted to a much smaller range of habitats and are absent from nearly all of the dunes, where D. deserti is usually the only common species. In the Mojave and Colorado Deserts the low diversity of rodent species within a single habitat type (ac diversity) is accompanied by a high degree of habitat specificity and a relatively high turnover of species between habitats (P diversity). The net result is that areas of the Colorado and Mojave Deserts large enough to contain many kinds of habitats have about the same number of species of seed-eating desert rodents as comparable areas in the Great Basin, where the diversity of species within single habitat types is several times greater. Biogeographic and evolutionary influences on species diversity The diversity of seed-eating rodents on five dunes (14 to 18) was not discussed in detail in the pre- IN DESERT RODENTS 783 vious section because there was good evidence that several rodent species occurring on similar dunes in other areas had not had the opportunity to colonize these five. Something other than the local ecology of the dune habitats seems to be required to explain the composition of the rodent faunas of these dunes. Three of these dunes (14, 15. and 16) are similar in latitude, altitude, climate, and vegetation to the 13 dunes discussed in the previous section. Although dunes with comparable rainfall and plant species diversity normally supported four or five rodent species. dunes 14, 15, and 16 were inhabited by only two or three species, and D. merriami, D. deserti, and M. pallidus were conspicuously absent. As mentioned earlier, all three dunes are outside the geographic ranges of D. merriami and D. deserti and dunes 14 and 15 are outside the range of M. pallidus. This is good evidence that dunes 14, 15, and 16 are biogeographically depauperate. The geographic location of these dunes has prevented several species from colonizing them, and has resulted in a lower species diversity than the dunes are apparently capable of supporting. This contrasts markedly with the situation on dunes 8 to 13, which are also inhabited by three or fewer species but which do not receive enough rainfall or produce enough seeds to support more, even though potential colonists have access to them. It is not difficult to account for the failure of D. merriami and D. deserti to colonize the depauperate dunes. Both species prefer lowland areas with sandy soils. The depauperate dunes lie in isolated basins separated from the ranges of the two species of kangaroo rats by rocky hills and mountains of unsuitable habitat. I have shown elsewhere (Brown 1971) that small terrestrial mammals are very poor at crossing altitudinal and habitat barriers only a few miles in extent. The ranges of these and other desert-dwelling species are probably more extensive now than they were during those periods of the Pleistocene when the climate of the southwest was significantly cooler and wetter than it is at present. Whether D. merriami and D. deserti once occurred in the isolated basins but have become extinct as a result of habitat changes during the Pleistocene, or whether these species never inhabited the basins is immaterial. What is important is that at present there are large areas of apparently suitable habitat which these species have not had the opportunity to exploit. D. merriami, D. desert, and M. pallidus are absent from the entire Bonneville Basin, which includes much of western Utah and part of eastern Nevada. It contains several sets of dunes that are almost identical in general appearance, climate (including rainfall), and vegetation to dunes several hundred kilometers to the west, where D. merriami, D. deserti, and M. pallidus are abundant and most of the dunes are inhabited by four or five 784 JAMES H. BROWN common species. In contrast, dunes 14 and 15. in the Bonneville Basin, have only three common species: D. ordi, Perornyscusyinaniculatus, and either P. iongiinembnrisor R. mnegalotis. The unequivocal test of whether the rodent faunas of these dunes are depauperate for biogeographic reasons is a series of introduction experiments to determine whether the number of species can be increased. Such experiments would be easy to perform and should yield interesting results. In the 1930's a small number of D. ordi was introduced into sand dunes on the south shore of Lake Erie in northern Ohio, more than 1,000 km east of the natural geographic range of D. ordi and all other heteromyid rodents. The kangaroo rats became established, increased. and persisted for at least a decade. They may still be present; if not, their extinction was probably caused by alteration and destruction of the dune habitat by man. Thus, some sand dunes seem to be capable of supporting more species of seed-eating rodents than occur there naturally. Two other dunes (17 and 18) which several rodent species did not have the opportunity to colonize were at higher elevations, and consequently received more rainfall, than any of the other dunes sampled. It is possible, perhaps likely, that even if the missing species M. pallidus, D. merriami, and D. desert, had the opportunity to colonize these dunes they would be unable to do so. The climate, particularly the cold, snowy winters, might be too severe for these lowland species, even if the dunes produced sufficient seeds to support them. In this case the absence of species must be explained not simply in terms of lack of access to species already capable of living there, but rather in terms of the lack of species capable of colonizing the habitat even if access were provided. Thus. these dunes may be depauperate in an evolutionary sense, rather than in a strictly biogeographic sense; that is, speciation has failed to produce additional species capable of inhabiting these dunes even though there are sufficient resources to permit the coexistence of other species. Of course this is difficult to test, but one kind of evidence does suggest that these high altitude dunes could support more species of seed-eating rodents. In addition to the three or four common species, the samples of these dunes contained several rare species (two on dune 17, three on dune 18). The presence of these species, usually found in other kinds of habitats, suggests that the dunes produce sufficient seed resources to support small populations of these marginal species. If this is so. I see no reason why the dunes could not support at least one or two additional common species if they were of appropriate size, and adapted to the cold climate and open, sandy habitat. Ecology, Vol. 54, No. 4 GENERAL DISCUSSION The results of the present study and some of the previous empirical and theoretical work on species diversity should be examined for patterns of general significance. The relationship between the predictable amount of resources and diversity undoubtedly is a general one, although few of the existing empirical studies suggest that productivity or availability of resources has an important effect on species diversity in most groups of animals or plants. However, the quantity of resources must be one of the primary variables that determines how many resource-limited species can subdivide the resources and coexist. Differences in availability of resources in a geographic dimension must be the major explanation of the relation between insular area and species diversity on islands (MacArthur and Wilson 1967). As pointed out earlier, resources that are unpredictable are scarce at certain times, and this has the effect of reducing the number of coexisting species which they can support. The literature of empirical studies of species diversity suggests that the effects of abundance and predictability of resources are often negated or at least obscured by the effects of the way in which the resources are distributed. Resources can be apportioned among species on the basis of inherent characteristics, such as variations in their size, shape, or chemical composition, or on the basis of extrinsic properties, such as their distribution in space and time. The greater the distribution of a resource, both with respect to number of parameters and variation in a single parameter, the greater possibilities for subdivision of the resource and coexistence of species. The influence of the distribution of resources on species diversity is emphasized by numerous papers which report correlations between species diversity and some aspect of habitat structure (e.g., MacArthur and MacArthur 1961, MacArthur 1964, Pianka 1967, Rosenzweig and Winakur 1969). However, in most of these studies the abundance and predictability of resources was not measured, and so it is not known to what extent resource abundance is correlated with habitat structure and is therefore an important part of the explanation of diversity. The patterns of body sizes in rodent communities of varying diversity are similar to those reported by others who have studied closely related, coexisting species. Regular distributions of dimensions of the body or of trophic structures is a conspicuous feature of many groups of coexisting species using particulate resources (e.g., Hutchinson 1959, Shoener 1965, Rand and Williams 1969, Rosenzweig 1966, McNab 1971). The significance of these patterns of body size will be discussed further in another paper (Brown and Lieberman 1973). The increased habitat specific- Summer 1973 SPECIES DIVERSITY ity and turnover of species between habitats ( 3 diversity) which appears to accompany decreased resource abundance and species diversity within habitats (x diversity) may also be a general pattern, but there is little evidence for this phenomenon in the literature. Ecological parameters such as abundance, predictability, and distribution of resources determine how many species a habitat can support. but significantly fewer species may actually be present. Two kinds of depauperate habitats may be distinguished. First, some habitats lack species because biogeographic barriers have prevented colonization. The fact that introduced species frequently have become established in mainland or insular habitats without causing the extinction of native species provides a posteriori evidence of the existence of such habitats. With sufficient knowledge of appropriate habitats and species it should be possible to predict which habitats are biogeographically depauperate, and to test these predictions by means of introduction experiments. Second, some habitats may be evolutionarily depauperate in the sense that they are capable of supporting additional species, but no existing species possess the adaptations necessary to colonize them. This sort of evolutionary influence on species diversity is difficult to detect and almost impossible to verify scientifically, yet it may account for significant variability in numbers of species between natural habitats. Environments characterized by unusual physical conditions, small size, or impermanence in evolutionary time (such as hot springs, salt lakes, and caves) frequently contain remarkably few species. It seems likely that speciation has simply not produced sufficient species to fill these habitats to their ecological capacities. Apparently species diversity in these habitats is determined by an equilibrium between speciation (or adaptation) and extinction, rather than by an equilibrium between immigration of existing species and local extinction as it is in most other habitats. Two empirical studies of species diversity of terrestrial vertebrates in desert habitats warrant detailed comparison with the present study. Pianka (1967) studied the species diversity of lizards in flatland habitats in the same deserts as my sand dune localities. Geographic variation in the diversity of lizard species follows a pattern almost opposite that observed in the seed-eating rodents. Only four to five species of lizards are found in flatland habitats in the Great Basin Desert, and about twice that number occur in comparable habitats in the Mojave, Colorado, and Sonoran Deserts. Pianka attributed this variation in species diversity to biogeographic barriers to dispersal, length of growing season, amount of warm season productivity, and spatial heterogeneity. He concluded that spatial heterogeneity of IN DESERT RODENTS 785 the vegetation was the most important factor. Since most lizards are insectivorous (some feed on green vegetation or small vertebrates, but none on seeds), poikilothermic, and active only during the warm part of the year, it is hardly surprising that they show a different pattern of species diversity than that of the rodents, which eat mostly seeds, are homoeothermic, and can be active all year. Unfortunately, no information is available on the abundance, diversity, and predictability of food resources in the habitats of these lizards, so it is impossible to evaluate the effect of this factor on species diversity. However, Pianka's work indicates that the structure of the vegetation certainly has some direct effect on diversity, because the trees and yuccas which are found only in the southern deserts are utilized by specialized arboreal species (Pianka 1966). Rosenzweig and Winakur (1969) recently have studied the ecology of seed-eating rodents in southern Arizona and have attempted to account for variation in rodent species diversity between different kinds of habitats. Their results were quite different from mine; they found that foliage height diversity, vegetation density, and soil strength were the variables that most affected rodent species diversity. Much of the discrepancy between the two studies is probably the result of differences in design. Rosenzweig and Winakur studied several kinds of habitats within a local area, whereas I worked in the same type of habitat (with respect to vegetation and soils) over a wide geographic area. Rosenzweig and Winakur did not measure seed abundance in the habitats they studied, and it is entirely possible that this was a proximate variable which accounted for some of the variability in species diversity. Certainly one would expect that within a local area, all of which receives approximately the same amount of rainfall, seed production might be correlated with such things as foliage height diversity, vegetation density, and soil type. Also, some of the habitats in southern Arizona contained much more tall, woody vegetation (including small trees) than did the sand dune habitats I studied. Rosenzweig and Winakur suggested that in these habitats seeds may be subdivided among rodent species partly on the basis of vertical foraging zones. This is unlikely in sand dune habitats where all of the vegetation is low and roughly similar in form (Brown and Lieberman 1973). If additional parameters are involved in apportioning resources among rodent species in southern Arizona, one might expect species diversity to be influenced by factors other than the predictable amount of seed production. Desert rodents are renowned for being diverse and abundant in ecosystems characterized by few other species and little biomass (Rosenzweig and Winakur 1969, Hall 1946, p. 1-2). It is less well known that 786 Ecology, Vol. 54, No. 4 JAMES H. BROWN rodents are probably more diverse ill desert and semiarid grassland habitats than in any other habitats in temperate North America (Baker 1971 ). It is not uncommon to find between 8 and I () species, of which 5 or more are seed-eaters, in a single acre of uniform desert habitat (Hall 1946, Hoffmeister and Goodpaster 1954). A comparable area of homogeneous temperate forest, mesic grassland, or marsh usually supports no more than 5 or 6 species. The spectacular diversity of rodents in the desert is largely the result of the coexistence of several seed-eating species and can be attributed to two characteristics of desert seeds. First, seeds are always available. Many of the seeds are produced by annuals that exist as vegetative plants only for a short period following heavy rains. For the majority of their lives (for many months and often for several years) the desert annuals lie scattered and dormant as seeds. These plants have adapted to the unpredictability of the desert climate by producing large numbers of seeds and by evolving mechanisms which insure that only a portion of them germinate each season. This is essential because many desert areas receive sufficient rainfall for the annuals to produce a new crop of seeds only every 2nd or 3rd year on the average. Each species of annual has evolved a reproductive strategy which insures that there are always sufficient seeds scattered in the habitat to produce a new generation. This means that regardless of rainfall or the presence of succulent vegetation rodents can always find seeds. The rodents themselves help to insure the continued availability of seeds by gathering and storing them when they are abundant. Because seeds are always present, some rodent species (especially some species of Perot-nat1itus) have been able to specialize to the point that they utilize virtually no other source of food or water. In more mesic habitats it has not been possible for species to become such specialized granivores; in the spring most of the seeds either germinate or else they are so well hidden or buried that the rodents cannot find them and for several months must rely on other kinds of food. The second characteristic of seeds that permits the coexistence of rodent species is their discrete, particulate nature, which enables them to be apportioned among species on the basis of size. Many other kinds of resources do not lend themselves to being partitioned among species. For example several species of the rodent genera Microtus and Siginodoni feed on the leaves of grasses and forbs, but it is rare to find more than one species in the same habitat (Baker 1971). Seeds, because they are omnipresent, particulate resources of varying size, are the key to the diversity of rodent species in desert ecosystems. The seeds are also primary resources for two other groups of animals that probably compete to some extent with the rodents seed-eating birds, which winter in the deserts in large mixed-species flocks, and insects, particularly ants, which are spectacularly abundant and diverse in many desert habitats. ACKNOWLLDGM ENTS To my wife, Astrid, I am indebted for invaluable assistance and encouragement during all phases of the work. H. J. Thompson kindly identified the plants. Numerous colleagues and students contributed important discussions and useful suggestions. G. A. Lieberman, M. L. Rosenzweig, K. T. Harper, D. J. Futuyma, and C. D. Barbour have been particularly helpful and have kindly read and criticized the manuscript. Special thanks is due also to R. H. MacArthur for many hours of critical and stimulating discussion. The work was supported in large part by N.S.F. Grant GB 8765. LITE RATURE CITED Baker, R. H. 1971. Nutritional strategies of myomorph rodents in North American Grasslands. J. Mammal. 52: 800-805. Beatley, J. C. 1967. Survival of winter animals in the Mojave Desert. Ecology 48: 745-750. 1969. Dependence of desert rodents on winter animals and precipitation. Ecology 50: 721-724. Brown, J. H. 1971. Mammals on mountaintops: nonequilibrium insular biogeography. Am. 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