| Abstract: | Species with extensive geographic ranges may interact with different species assemblages at distant locations, with the result that the nature of the interactions may vary spatially. Black-tailed prairie dogs Cynomys ludovicianus occur from Canada to Mexico in grasslands of the western Great Plains of North America. Black-tailed prairie dogs alter vegetation and dig extensive burrow systems that alter grassland habitats for plants and other animal species. These alterations of habitat justify the descriptor " ecological engineer," and the resulting changes in species composition have earned them status as a keystone species. We examined the impact of black-tailed prairie dogs on small mammal assemblages by trapping at on- and off-colony locations at eight study areas across the species‘ geographic range. We posed 2 nested hypotheses: 1) prairie dogs function as a keystone species for other rodent species; and 2) the keystone role varies spatially. Assuming that it does, we asked what are the sources of the variation? Black-tailed prairie dogs consistently functioned as a keystone species in that there were strong statistically significant differences in community composition on versus off prairie dog colonies across the species range in prairie grassland. Small mammal species composition varied along both latitudinal and longitudinal gradients, and species richness varied from 4 to 11. Assemblages closer together were more similar; such correlations approximately doubled when including only on- or off-colony grids. Black-tailed prairie dogs had a significant effect on associated rodent assemblages that varied regionally, dependent upon the composition of the local rodent species pool. Over the range of the black-tailed prairie dog, on-colony rodent richness and evenness were less variable, and species composition was more consistent than off-colony assemblages. ?? 2010 The Authors. |
| Genre: | Article |
| ProdID: | 70037141 |
| Citation Author: | Cully, J. F.; Collinge, S. K.; Van Nimwegen, R. E.; Ray, C.; Johnson, W. C.; Thiagarajan, B.; Conlin, D. B.; Holmes, B. E. |
| Citation Contributing Office: | |
| Citation Datum: | |
| Citation Day: | |
| Citation Edition: | |
| Citation Editor: | |
| Citation End Page: | 677 |
| Citation Issue: | 4 |
| Citation Keywords: | |
| Citation Language: | English |
| Citation Larger Work Title: | Ecography |
| Citation LatN: | |
| Citation LatS: | |
| Citation LonE: | |
| Citation LonW: | |
| Citation Month: | |
| Citation No Pagination: | |
| Citation Number Of Pages: | 11 |
| Citation Online Only Flag: | |
| Citation Phsyical Description: | |
| Citation Projection: | |
| Citation Public Comments: | |
| Citation Publisher: | |
| Citation Series: | |
| Citation Series Code: | |
| Citation Series Number: | |
| Citation Search Results Text: | Spatial variation in keystone effects: Small mammal diversity associated with black-tailed prairie dog colonies; 2010; Article; Journal; Ecography; Cully, J. F.; Collinge, S. K.; Van Nimwegen, R. E.; Ray, C.; Johnson, W. C.; Thiagarajan, B.; Conlin, D. B.; Holmes, B. E. |
| Citation Start Page: | 667 |
| Citation Volume: | 33 |
| Citation Year: | 2010 |
| Type: | citation/reference |
| Text: | Spatial variation in keystone effects: Small mammal diversity associated with black-tailed prairie dog colonies; 2010; Article; Journal; Ecography; Cully, J. F.; Collinge, S. K.; Van Nimwegen, R. E.; Ray, C.; Johnson, W. C.; Thiagarajan, B.; Conlin, D. B.; Holmes, B. E. |
| URL (THUMBNAIL): | http://pubs.er.usgs.gov/thumbnails/outside_thumb.jpg |
| URL (DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER): | http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0587.2009.05746.x |
| Date Other: | Fri, 1 Jan 2010 00:00 -0600 |
| Publisher: | |