Are introduced black rats ('Rattus rattus') a functional replacement for mycophagous native rodents in fragmented forests?

The fungal diet of the introduced black rat ('Rattus rattus') was examined in a fragmented forest in northeastern New South Wales, Australia, to determine whether this species was consuming and dispersing the spores of native truffles. Because of the absence of native rodents at the site,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Vernes, Karl A, School of Environmental and Rural Science, orcid:0000-0003-1635-9950, McGrath, Katrina A, Environmental and Rural Science
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier Ltd 2009
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/5141
Description
Summary:The fungal diet of the introduced black rat ('Rattus rattus') was examined in a fragmented forest in northeastern New South Wales, Australia, to determine whether this species was consuming and dispersing the spores of native truffles. Because of the absence of native rodents at the site, the diet of the swamp wallaby ('Wallabia bicolor'), a known mycophagist in the region, was examined simultaneously as a benchmark against which to compare fungal consumption by black rats. All 19 scats collected from black rats contained fungal spores, while 29 of the 34 swamp wallaby scats contained fungal spores. Most spores were from hypogeous ('truffle-like') fungal species, although both black rats and swamp wallabies each consumed a few epigeous ('mushroom-like') taxa. While rat and wallaby diets contained many of the same taxa, their diets were significantly different in terms of the fungal taxa that comprised each sample. Our results suggest that black rats might perform an important spore dispersal role in degraded and fragmented landscapes where native rodents have been extirpated, and might complement the dispersal role played by larger mycophagous mammals like swamp wallabies.