4.7 Article

Foraging and Food Selection in a Desert Rodent: Diet Shifts of the Sandy Inland Mouse between Population Booms and Busts

Journal

ANIMALS
Volume 13, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ani13101702

Keywords

arid zone; Australia; desert rodent; diet; foraging; granivory; invertebrates; Pseudomys hermannsburgensis; seeds

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The sandy inland mouse Pseudomys hermannsburgensis primarily feeds on seeds, but also consumes invertebrates and green plant material. During prolonged dry periods, the dietary shift towards more invertebrates suggests a scarcity of seeds. This flexibility in diet is important for the rodent’s survival in Australia’s unpredictable arid regions.
Seeds are commonly viewed as the mainstay of the diet of desert rodents. We describe the diet of a common Australian desert rodent, the sandy inland mouse Pseudomys hermannsburgensis, using direct observations of free-living animals and analysis of the stomach contents of preserved specimens. Direct observations showed that animals forage mostly on the ground surface and eat seeds from a wide range of plant species, as well as invertebrates and occasional green plant material. Stomach content analysis revealed no differences in the presence or absence of these three major food groups between seasons or the sexes. However, invertebrates were more prominent in the diet of mice during prolonged, dry, population bust' periods compared with post-rain population boom' periods, with this dietary shift probably reflecting a scarcity of seeds during the busts. The results confirm that seed is an important component of the diet of P. hermannsburgensis, with 92% of stomachs containing seed. The results also support the classification of the species as omnivorous rather than granivorous, with 70% of stomachs containing invertebrates and over half the specimens analysed containing both seeds and invertebrates. We suggest that dietary flexibility is important for rodent persistence in Australia's climatically unpredictable arid regions.

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