Rodent Robbers Good for Tropical Trees

An agouti with the black palm tree's orange fruit, which contains large seeds.

An agouti with the black palm tree’s orange fruit, which contains large seeds.

There’s no honor among thieves when it comes to rodent robbers—which turns out to be a good thing for tropical trees that depend on animals to spread their seeds.

Results of a yearlong study in Panama, published online in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences the week of July 16, suggest that thieving rodents helped the black palm tree survive by taking over the seed-spreading role of the mighty mastodon and other extinct elephant-like creatures that are thought to have eaten these large seeds.

Dr Roland Kays, Research Associate Professor, NC State University Department of Forestry & Environmental Resources and Director of the BioDiversity Lab at the NC Museum of Natural Sciences Nature Research Center

Dr. Roland Kays

“The question is how this tree managed to survive for 10,000 years if its seed dispersers are extinct,” says Roland Kays, a zoologist with North Carolina State University and the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences. “There’s always been this mystery of how does this tree survive, and now we have a possible answer for it.”

The study showed that agoutis, rainforest rodents that hoard seeds like squirrels, repeatedly stole from their neighbors’ underground seed caches. All that pilfering moved some black palm seeds far enough from the mother tree to create favorable conditions for germination.

“We knew that these rodents would bury the seeds but we had no idea that there would be this constant digging up of the seed, moving it and  burying it, over and over again,” says Kays, a member of the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute team. “As rodents steal the same seed many, many times, it adds up to a long-distance movement of the seed that one animal by itself could have never done.”

One seed was buried 36 times before an agouti dug it up and ate it. About 14 percent of the seeds survived until the following year.

The study, funded with a National Science Foundation grant, caught the furry thieves in the act via individual tags on agoutis, video surveillance of seed caches and tiny motion-activated transmitters attached to more than 400 seeds.

Applying such sophisticated animal tracking techniques to the plant world has the potential to improve scientists’ understanding of forest ecology and regeneration, Kays says.

“When you think about global climate change and habitats shifting, for a forest to move into new areas, trees need to have their seeds moved into new areas. This opens up a route to study how animals can help trees adjust to climate change through seed dispersal.”

Kays, a faculty member with NC State’s College of Natural Resources, was part of an international team that included scientists from Ohio State University and institutions in the Netherlands, Belgium, the United Kingdom and Germany.

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Media Contacts: 
Dr. Roland Kays, roland_kays@ncsu.edu or via Skype at roland.kays
D’Lyn Ford, News Services, 919/513-4798 or 919/480-9493 dlyn_ford@ncsu.edu

Note to editors: An abstract of the paper follows.
 
“Thieving Rodents as Substitute Dispersers of Megafaunal Seeds”
Authors: Patrick A. Jansen, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Centre for Ecosystem Studies -Wageningen University, Center for Ecological and Evolutionary Studies-University of Groningen; Ben T. Hirsch, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, School of Environment and Natural Resources-Ohio State University; Willem-Jan Emsens, Centre for Ecosystem Studies-Wageningen University, Ecosystem Management Research Group-Department of Biology-University of Antwerp; Veronica Zamora-Gutierrez, Centre for Ecosystem Studies-Wageningen University, Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge; Martin Wikelski, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Max Planck Institute for Ornithology; Roland W. Kays, Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, North Carolina State University

Published: Online the week of July 16, 2012, in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Abstract: The Neotropics have many plant species that seem to be adapted for seed dispersal by megafauna that went extinct in the late Pleistocene. Given the crucial importance of seed dispersal for plant persistence, it remains a mystery how these plants have survived more than 10,000 years without their mutualist dispersers. Here we present support for the hypothesis that secondary seed dispersal by scatterhoarding rodents has facilitated the persistence of these largeseeded species. We used miniature radio transmitters to track the dispersal of reputedly megafaunal seeds by Central American agoutis, which scatter-hoard seeds in shallow caches in the soil throughout the forest. We found that seeds were initially cached at mostly short distances and then quickly dug up again. However, rather than eating the recovered seeds, agoutis continued to move and recache the seeds, up to 36 times. Agoutis dispersed an estimated 35 percent of seeds for >100 m. An estimated 14 percent of the cached seeds survived to the next year, when a new fruit crop became available to the rodents. Serial video-monitoring of cached seeds revealed that the stepwise dispersal was caused by agoutis repeatedly stealing and recaching each other’s buried seeds. Although previous studies suggest that rodents are poor dispersers, we demonstrate that communities of rodents can in fact provide highly effective long-distance seed dispersal. Our findings suggest that thieving scatter-hoarding rodents could substitute for extinct megafaunal seed dispersers of tropical large-seeded trees.

Dr. Mary Watzin Named Dean of NC State’s College of Natural Resources

Dr. Mary Watzin, incoming dean of the NC State College of Natural ResourcesDr. Mary Catherine Watzin, dean of the Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources at the University of Vermont, has been named dean of the College of Natural Resources at North Carolina State University, effective Oct. 15. Provost Warwick Arden announced the appointment today.

“I’m very pleased that Dr. Watzin will be joining us to lead the College of Natural Resources,” Arden says. “She has demonstrated significant administrative leadership skills and experience, and brings a broad perspective on natural resources and the environment that will serve this highly regarded college extremely well moving forward.”

An expert in marine sciences, aquatic ecology and management, Watzin has served as dean of the Rubenstein School since 2009 and as professor since 2005. Before becoming dean, she founded and directed the University of Vermont’s lakefront ecosystem science laboratory, which also oversees the university’s research vessel and collaborates closely with an adjacent science center and aquarium.

“I am deeply honored by the opportunity to lead NC State’s nationally prominent College of Natural Resources,” she said. “The college and the university have a bold vision for the future and I am inspired by the transformational change that is under way across the campus. Solutions to the challenges of today’s world will come through new collaborations and the kinds of interdisciplinary teaching, research and global engagement that NC State is pursuing. I am very excited to join this effort.”
 
Watzin has received numerous awards for her work, including the Teddy Roosevelt Conservation Award, the Ibakari-Kasumigaura Prize from the International Lake Environment Committee in Shiga Prefecture, Japan, and the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry Partner of the Year Award in 2006. 

Dr. Mary Watzin at workWatzin has collaborated with a wide range of partners to explore topics ranging from toxicology to aquatic food web dynamics, harmful algae blooms, hydrodyanamics and stream habitat conditions, nonpoint source pollution, and the effectiveness of environmental management approaches and policies.  She has won more than $8.7 million in grants to support her efforts.  She has also worked continuously to bring science into the policy arena, especially around water quality issues.

From 1992 to 2009, Watzin served as chair of the technical advisory committee to the Lake Champlain Steering Committee while also serving on the steering committee itself. She oversaw all technical aspects of the Lake Champlain Basin Program, a collaborative effort between the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the U.S. Department of the Interior along with the state of Vermont, state of New York and the province of Québec. About $70 million has been invested in the program.

A prolific scholar and noted speaker, Watzin has authored or co-authored more than 60 refereed journal articles and book chapters and more than 45 refereed technical reports and other publications. For the last decade she has presented local talks on research and environmental topics of interest to her community. 

She is a member of numerous scientific societies, including the Ecological Society of America, the Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

Watzin received her bachelor’s degree in marine science from the University of South Carolina in 1978 and her Ph.D. in marine sciences from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1984. After receiving her Ph.D., she worked as an ecologist for the National Wetlands Research Center, part of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, in Slidell, La.

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 Media Contact:  Tracey Peake, News Services, 919/515-6142 or tracey_peake@ncsu.edu

(Photos –  Rubenstein School of Environmental and Natural Resources, University of Vermont)        

Genetic Data Analysis Summer Course Draws Students From 11 Countries

Genetic Data Analysis Summer Course - Prague

Faculty and Students in the 2012 Genetic Data Analysis Summer Course In Prague

Fikret Isik, Associate Professor and Associate Director of  the Tree Improvement Program at North Carolina State University, was invited to teach a one week ‘Summer Course in Genetic Data Analysis – Applications for Plant and Animal Breeding’ by the Czech University of Life Sciences.

The summer course was organized by the Czech University of Life Sciences took place on June 11-15, 2012 in Prague in the Czech Republic.

Jim Holland, Professor of Crop Science and Research Geneticist (USDA) and Christian Maltecca, Animal geneticist with the Department of Animal Science at NCSU joined Dr. Isik to teach the summer course.

The course covered advanced quantitative genetics for analysis of genomic and phenotypic data for plant and animal breeding.  Twenty-five professionals, graduate students and faculty from 11 different countries attended the course.

For More Information, Contact:
Tilla Fearn, Communication Director, (919) 513-4644 or tilla_fearn@ncsu.edu

LaPan Awarded 2012 ASTA Holland America Line Graduate Research Scholarship

Chantell LaPan - NCSU PRTM doctoral studentTourism Cares, the tourism industry’s premier charitable organization for preservation, conservation, restoration, and education, has awarded Chantell LaPan, a doctoral student in the NC State Department of Parks, Recreation & Tourism Management,  the 2012 ASTA Holland America Line Graduate Research Scholarship from Tourism Cares. 

The $4,000 award is a portion of $78,000 in academic scholarships awarded to 58 travel, tourism, and hospitality students attending colleges and universities throughout the United States and Canada. 

LaPan will use the scholarship to investigate tourism entrepreneurship in the Coastal region of Ghana, West Africa, including the process by which tourism entrepreneurs decide to go into business and factors that contribute to successful tourism enterprises. Ghana is a highly entrepreneurial society, with an interest in expanding their tourism industry. This study could have impacts for both tourism professionals and development workers in the region, as it will concentrate on the intersection of poverty, entrepreneurship, and tourism.

In addition to the monetary awards, the academic scholarship recipients are also invited to attend the Tourism Cares Experience the Industry Student Program at the annual NTA Convention, January 20 – 24, 2013 in Orlando, Florida. The program gives students the opportunity to shadow professional mentors and participate in tourism industry workshops.

The scholarships are funded jointly by Tourism Cares and by members of the American Society of Travel Agents (ASTA), the International Airlines Travel Agent Network (IATAN), and NTA and are awarded annually to students pursuing undergraduate or graduate travel, tourism, or hospitality degrees at accredited colleges and universities.

More information on scholarship recipients and their educational institutions

 About Tourism Cares
Tourism Cares is an innovative nonprofit organization formed in 2005 through a consolidation of the National Tourism Foundation and the Travelers Conservation Foundation. The organization works to preserve the travel experience for future generations through a three pronged approach. We award grants to natural, cultural, and historic sites throughout the world.  In addition, we host unique volunteer restoration projects designed specifically for travel professionals. Recognized as the most innovative “give-back” program in the industry, Tourism Cares volunteer project and Volunteer Day draw thousands of corporate leaders and individuals together to share in the conservation and preservation of treasured cultural and historic sites. We also help assure a knowledgeable tourism workforce by granting academic and service-focused scholarships to hospitality and tourism students.

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For More Information, Contact:
Tilla Fearn, Communication Director, (919) 513-4644 or tilla_fearn@ncsu.edu

Stamm Scholarship To Aid Worthy Wood Products Students

Learning about wood products.The NC State Natural Resources Foundation is pleased to announce the funding of the Alfred J. Stamm Memorial Scholarship at NC State University by his son, Alfred John Stamm. 

This endowment will provide merit–based scholarships for undergraduate students enrolled in the Wood Products Program in NC State University’s Department of Forest Biomaterials.

The initial gift to this endowment was received from Mrs. Erdine Stamm in 1986 in memory of her husband, a retired distinguished professor at NC State from 1959-1970.

Dr. Stamm was a native of Los Angeles where he received his BS of Science from California Institute of Technology. He completed his Masters and PHD in physical chemistry at the University of Wisconsin. In 1925 he began research work at the US Forest Products laboratory in Madison, Wisconsin until coming to NC State in 1959. He received numerous awards, fellowships and the prestigious Reuben Robertson Professorship of Wood and Paper Science.

A true scientist, he published two books, over 150 publications and held 11 patents in the area of physics, chemistry and the structure of wood.

The scholarship endowment will recognize in perpetuity the significant contributions to wood science and technology by Dr. Stamm through the professional accomplishments and personal lives of the young men and women who study at NC State University. 

During his professional life, which spanned 45 years, Dr. Stamm received national acclaim for his research and was the recipient of numerous awards and was the author of two books and over 150 research papers.

About the Department of Forest Biomaterials
NC State’s Department of Forest Biomaterials (FB) is home to one of the oldest and most respected paper science and engineering programs in the world and to a nationally recognized wood products program with a long history if supporting wood manufacturing industries, sustainable housing and their surrounding communities.  FB also has a fast-growing forest biomaterials and bioenergy effort which examines the production of novel biomass resources, and develops the chemical science and engineering technology for the sustainable production of materials and energy.  FB’s approach recognizes the scientific and engineering principles driving each area of study, as well as, applicable technology and business skills. Students examine the broader sustainability issues that affect industries operating in these fields, including the financial, management and social components through hands-on learning focused on identifying solutions to real-world problems and developing futuristic products and environmentally friendly processes.

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Learn more about the Wood Products program in the NC State College of Natural Resources 

For More Information, Contact:
Tilla Fearn, Communication Director, (919) 513-4644 or tilla_fearn@ncsu.edu