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Clark's nutcracker fitted with a radio tag. Its movements were
tracked as part of a study on the effectiveness of the birds
in regenerating whitebark pine.
Photo credit: Teresa Lorenz
PORTLAND, Ore. February 16, 2011. The caching of whitebark pine
seeds by the Clark’s nutcracker in late summer and early
fall may not be enough to regenerate populations of the imperiled
conifer
in most of its range, scientists have found.
Their research—which
is featured in the February issue of Science Findings, a monthly
publication of the U.S. Forest Service’s
Pacific Northwest Research Station—suggests, for the first
time, that the success of whitebark pine restoration may be linked
to the conservation of another tree species: ponderosa pine.
“
Whitebark pine is a keystone species in the high-mountain ecosystems
of the northern Rockies, Cascades, Olympics, and eastern Sierra
Nevada because it plays a major role in creating suitable conditions
for
the growth of other plants and in supplying seeds, which are consumed
by a number of animals,” said Martin Raphael, a research
wildlife biologist with the station and one of the study’s
collaborators. “But
the species is in trouble and is experiencing declines of 45 percent
across some of its range.”
Regeneration of the high-elevation
tree—which is threatened
today by outbreaks of the mountain pine beetle and blister rust—would
seem intimately tied to the foraging behavior of the Clark’s
nutcracker, a crow-sized bird that propagates the tree by removing
its large seeds from its cones and caching them in the ground.
Unlike most other pines, the cones of whitebark trees do not open
on their
own to release their seeds, but must be forced open by Clark’s
nutcrackers. The birds’ spatial memory allows
them to retrieve seeds from many of their caches throughout the
year; those that remain are left to germinate.
“
The nutcrackers flock around whitebark pine stands in autumn as
the cones ripen and use their sharp, strong bills to hammer into
the
tightly closed cones and dig out the seeds,” said Teresa
Lorenz, a doctoral student who led the study, along with Raphael
and Forest
Service geneticist Carol Aubry, as part of her master’s degree
studies at Utah State University. “You can see the cone chips
flying.”
In the study, aimed at determining how effective
the birds are in regenerating whitebark pine, the researchers fitted
54 Clark’s
nutcrackers in the Olympic and Cascade Mountains with radio collars
and tracked them for three seasons. They found that:
- The nutcrackers
foraged widely for whitebark pine seeds, but transported nearly
all of them back to their home ranges for caching,
which suggests
that natural generation of the tree would be greatest within
the birds’ home ranges
- The nutcrackers transported seeds
over much longer distances than previously observed, sometimes
up to 20 miles, which suggests
that
the birds facilitate a great amount of genetic mixing of the
tree
- The nutcrackers tended to cache their seeds in sheltered
locations at the driest, lowest elevation sites within their
range—areas
unsuitable for successful whitebark pine germination
“
One of the most important things this study helped us to understand
is how unlikely it is that whitebark pine seeds will end up in
good germination spots,” Raphael said. “Birds placed
only about 15 percent of the seeds they gathered in places where
germination
is actually possible.”
In addition to revealing that Clark’s
nutcracker caching alone, while critical, would not be sufficient
to recover populations
of
whitebark pine, the study also is the first to document the role
of the birds in disseminating the seeds of ponderosa pine. The
nutcrackers not only routinely gathered ponderosa pine seeds
within their home
ranges, but were more effective in dispersing them to suitable
germination sites than they were at dispersing whitebark pine
seeds. “
Because we found ponderosa pine seeds to be an important food for
nutcrackers in Washington and Oregon, the success of whitebark
pine restoration may be irrevocably linked to the conservation
of low-elevation
ponderosa pine,” Lorenz said. “What we’ve found
can help managers focus restoration efforts and may help them
refine seed boundaries and identify the likeliest regeneration
sites.”
To read the February issue of Science Findings
online, visit http://www.treesearch.fs.fed.us/pubs/37291.
_____________________________________________________________________
The
PNW Research Station is headquartered in Portland, Oregon. It has
11 laboratories and centers located in Alaska, Oregon,
and Washington
and about 425 employees.
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