Nature is not uniform: it shows "hot spots" and "cold spots" for any species or process. For example, in a forest patch with a moderately dense population of chipmunks, some particular sites ("hot spots") get visited by chipmunks much more often than others ("cold spots"). The existence of such hot and cold spots can affect processes such as how rapidly diseases are transmitted or whether or not a prey species goes extinct. This study takes the problem a step further, by specifically examining how the persistence of hot and cold spots affects the impact of white-footed mice and chipmunks on their prey (gypsy moths and ground-nesting birds) and parasites (ticks and Lyme disease bacteria). Populations of these rodents will be manipulated to create permanent (3 years) and temporary (1 year) cold spots, and survival of their prey and infection prevalence of ticks will be compared between the two treatments.

The research will show how the persistence of hot and cold spots of pivotal small mammals affects human health (Lyme disease risk), forest health (gypsy moth outbreak risk), and abundance of songbirds. The project will contribute to primary education through a web-based resource created in collaboration with educators and targeted toward grades 6-12. The project will also provide research training for both undergraduate and graduate students. Finally, the research will inform efforts to enhance biological pest control, conserve rare species, or reduce spread of diseases.

Project Report

The suitability of the environment for any species of plant or animal differs from place to place, and these differences can affect how species impact each other. Suitability is usually considered over large areas, but even small-scale differences could amplify disease transmission or enable rare species to persist, particularly for animals that rarely move far. Our objective was to measure and test how small-scale patterns of two ecologically important rodents (white-footed mice and chipmunks) affect their prey (gypsy moths) and their parasites (blacklegged ticks that could carry Lyme disease). We used track plates to measure rodent activity across six well-studied oak-forest plots in upstate New York, 2008-2010. To uncover why some areas are rodent "hot spots" (high activity) and others are "cold spots", we compared local rodent activity to availability of food (seeds and arthropods) and cover. We also tried to create local "cold spots" by removing rodents in small areas. We searched the plots extensively for gypsy moth larvae and egg masses each year, measured attacks on gypsy moth pupae (mostly by mice), and tested nymphal blacklegged ticks for Lyme-disease infection. The interaction web explored by this research inspired educational materials aimed at helping students understand the workings of complex ecological systems, because familiar organisms have impacts that directly affect people. Mouse and chipmunk populations were low to moderate during the 3 years of field work, and their local activity varied substantially from point to point within our study areas. Mouse "hot spots" typically had thick brush and abundant arthropods, so both food and cover were important. Our attempts to create rodent "cold spots" did not work: removal spots had slightly higher activity of both species, perhaps as neighboring animals moved in. However, spots where we applied the same treatment (removal or not) over all 3 years had more consistent patterns of rodent activity than where we changed treatments each year, so we successfully manipulated the consistency of the rodent activity pattern over years. Local track activity of mice was a good predictor of predation on gypsy moth pupae, and we tended to find gypsy moth egg masses in spots meeting two conditions in early to mid-summer: 1) we found several caterpillars nearing the pupal stage and 2) we recorded few mouse tracks. The time window for low mouse activity covered over 6 weeks, which makes sense because gypsy moths entered the pupal stage at over a wide time range. Therefore, we showed that small-scale differences in mouse activity create refuges that could enable gypsy moths to persist. We collected the most blacklegged tick nymphs in areas with moist conditions and dense ground vegetation, but nymph abundance was not related to past activity of mice or chipmunks. The fraction of ticks carrying Lyme-disease bacteria was weakly related to past mouse activity at the large spatial scale of our plots, but not at smaller scales. Therefore, we did not find that small-scale variations in small mammal activity strongly affected the abundance of Lyme-disease carrying ticks, at least over the two years we examined. Food chains and food webs are frequently covered in our schools, yet most students can’t apply these ideas to real organisms in their local environment nor use these concepts to understand how ecosystems respond to environmental change. We found that 6th and 7th grade students understand simple links between pairs of species, but don’t realize that influences go both ways, extend to other species, or vary in strength and over time. We used these findings to craft an interactive web-based curriculum module for students to explore the complexities of the "acorn connections" and apply their new understanding to other complex ecological interactions. The module, soon to be available on the Cary Institute’s website, includes 4 chapters and instructions for complementary field studies. The module was pilot tested in two middle schools and one high school in 2011, with 6 teachers and 413 students participating. In addition, a Cary Institute educator went into the classrooms and taught a hands-on lesson based on the Lyme module. The pilot results are being used to assess student thinking about complex ecological interactions, and to shape the final version of the Module. In terms of broad impacts, this project is the first to specifically attempt to manipulate consistency (over time) of the spatial pattern of animal activity, and to measure predicted consequences. Despite confirming some hypothesized relationships at small scales, our findings highlight the difficulty of observing and predicting patterns at small spatial scales, even when such small scales may be important. This project has provided important field and laboratory experience to 36 primarily undergraduate technicians, and served as the basis for research projects conducted by 4 graduate students. The education program stemming from this research is providing a novel approach to teaching the concepts of ecological complexity in an accessible and familiar manner

Agency
National Science Foundation (NSF)
Institute
Division of Environmental Biology (DEB)
Application #
0743659
Program Officer
Alan James Tessier
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2008-03-15
Budget End
2012-02-29
Support Year
Fiscal Year
2007
Total Cost
$129,392
Indirect Cost
Name
University of North Dakota
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
Grand Forks
State
ND
Country
United States
Zip Code
58202