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Influence of residency and social odors in interactions between competing native and alien rodents
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">Vicki?L?StokesEmail author  Peter?B?Banks  Roger?P?Pech
Institution:(1) CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems, GPO Box 284, Canberra, ACT, 2601, Australia;(2) School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, 2052, Australia;(3) Manaaki Whenua–Landcare Research, PO Box 40, Lincoln, 7640, New Zealand;(4) Environmental Research Department, Huntly Central Services, Alcoa of Australia, PO Box 172, Pinjarra, WA, 6208, Australia
Abstract:Residency status of individuals in populations may be an important determinant of the outcomes of interspecific competition between native and introduced species. We examined direct behavioral interactions between two similarly sized rodents, the alien Rattus rattus and native Rattus fuscipes when they were respective residents and intruders in a small enclosure. Resident individuals were dominant in their behaviors toward intruders irrespective of the species that was resident. In contrast, interactive behaviors between conspecifics were often neutral or amicable, supporting suggestions that R. rattus and R. fuscipes are social animals. We then tested whether rodent species use heterospecific odors to avoid aggressive competitive interactions and partition space in the field. Neither R. fuscipes nor R. rattus responded to traps scented with the odors of male or female heterospecifics. If R. fuscipes does not recognize the odor of introduced R. rattus, then odors will not be cues to the presence or territorial space of competing heterospecifics. Rather, findings from both enclosure and field trials suggest that direct aggressive interactions between individual R. rattus and R. fuscipes probably facilitate segregation of space between these two species in wild populations, where resident animals may typically be the winners and exclude heterospecific intruders. These findings have implications for the invasion success of introduced rodents such as R. rattus into intact forests, where native populations may have competitive advantage because of their residency status.
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