Merriam's kangaroo rats (Dipodomys merriami) store seeds in burrows (l
arderhoarding) and in small clumps in shallow holes dug in the soil (s
catterhoarding). We used a large laboratory arena with an artificial b
urrow for larderhoarding and four sand-filled compartments for scatter
hoarding to test several alternative hypotheses about spatial patterns
of food caching. The hypotheses were that kangaroo rats prefer to (1)
larderhoard seeds in burrows, (2) scatterhoard seeds near burrows, (3
) scatterhoard seeds away from burrows, (4) scatterhoard seeds near fo
od sources, or (5) make widely spaced scatterhoards. Three treatments
that differed in the distance between the burrow and food source were
used to discriminate among hypotheses (2) through (4). There was a sub
stantial amount of variation among individuals in proportion of seeds
that were larderhoarded. Subjects initially scatterhoarded seeds close
to the food source, but distributed caches more evenly among caching
compartments as trials progressed. Increased evenness of cache distrib
ution resulted from harvesting and repositioning of extant caches as w
ell as selective placement of new caches. Initial caching close to foo
d may be adaptive by maximizing harvest rates during flushes of seed p
roduction and making seeds unavailable to non-digging competitors (bir
ds and ants). Subsequent redistribution of caches may make them less a
vailable to other rodents that locate buried seeds by smell and use ar
ea-restricted search to find closely spaced scatterhoards.