Abstract Hurricanes cause dramatic changes to forests by opening the canopy and depositing debris onto the forest floor. How invasive rodent populations respond to hurricanes is not well understood, but shifts in rodent abundance and foraging may result from scarce fruit and seed resources that follow hurricanes. We conducted studies in a wet tropical forest in Puerto Rico to better understand how experimental (canopy trimming experiment) and natural (Hurricane Maria) hurricane effects alter populations of invasive rodents (Rattus rattus [rats] and Mus musculus [mice]) and their foraging behaviors. To monitor rodent populations, we used tracking tunnels (inked and baited cards inside tunnels enabling identification of animal visitors' footp...
Increased parasitism in animals in disturbed habitats is often understood to be the result of increa...
Introduced black rats are among the most invasive species to islands worldwide. In addition to agri...
Small rodents have long been considered to be seed predators rather than effective seed dispersers....
Hurricanes cause dramatic changes to forests by opening the canopy and depositing debris onto the fo...
Hurricanes cause dramatic changes to forests by opening the canopy and depositing debris onto the fo...
Invasive mammals, particularly black rats (Rattus rattus), house mice (Mus musculus), and mongoose (...
Dispersion, removal and predation of C. brasiliense seeds was evaluated in a forest affected by hurr...
Despite frequent occurrences of invasive rats (Rattus spp.) on islands, their known effects on fores...
Invasive rodents, particularly rats (Rattus spp.), occupy \u3e80% of the world’s islands and are amo...
Harvestmen exhibit substantial responses to environmental conditions, disturbances, and modification...
Hurricanes are major natural disturbances and integral components of forest disturbance regimes glob...
Invasive rodent eradications are frequently undertaken to curb island biodiversity loss. However, th...
Climate change is altering the distribution of wildlife across the globe. These distributional chang...
One of the largest bottlenecks for tropical tree regeneration is seedling recruitment---the ability ...
Introduced black rats are among the most invasive species to islands worldwide. In addition to agric...
Increased parasitism in animals in disturbed habitats is often understood to be the result of increa...
Introduced black rats are among the most invasive species to islands worldwide. In addition to agri...
Small rodents have long been considered to be seed predators rather than effective seed dispersers....
Hurricanes cause dramatic changes to forests by opening the canopy and depositing debris onto the fo...
Hurricanes cause dramatic changes to forests by opening the canopy and depositing debris onto the fo...
Invasive mammals, particularly black rats (Rattus rattus), house mice (Mus musculus), and mongoose (...
Dispersion, removal and predation of C. brasiliense seeds was evaluated in a forest affected by hurr...
Despite frequent occurrences of invasive rats (Rattus spp.) on islands, their known effects on fores...
Invasive rodents, particularly rats (Rattus spp.), occupy \u3e80% of the world’s islands and are amo...
Harvestmen exhibit substantial responses to environmental conditions, disturbances, and modification...
Hurricanes are major natural disturbances and integral components of forest disturbance regimes glob...
Invasive rodent eradications are frequently undertaken to curb island biodiversity loss. However, th...
Climate change is altering the distribution of wildlife across the globe. These distributional chang...
One of the largest bottlenecks for tropical tree regeneration is seedling recruitment---the ability ...
Introduced black rats are among the most invasive species to islands worldwide. In addition to agric...
Increased parasitism in animals in disturbed habitats is often understood to be the result of increa...
Introduced black rats are among the most invasive species to islands worldwide. In addition to agri...
Small rodents have long been considered to be seed predators rather than effective seed dispersers....