Jc. Alley et al., Responses of litter-dwelling arthropods and house mice to beech seeding inthe Orongorongo Valley, New Zealand, J RS NZ, 31(2), 2001, pp. 425-452
This study investigates further the possibility that eruptions of house mic
e in forests of southern beech (Nothofagus spp.) in New Zealand after mast
seedings are triggered by increases in the populations of some arthropods,
especially Lepidoptera larvae and spiders that are common foods of mice, ra
ther than by the beech seed. It reports on a 5-year study of arthropods of
the forest floor in hard beech and silver beech forest in the Orongorongo V
alley, near Wellington, in relation to (1) litter and seedfall, and (2) the
numbers and diet of mice. Litter-feeding larvae of Lepidoptera in both the
litter and fermentation layers of the forest floor feed on the fallen male
flowers of beech, and most species were more common after heavy flowering
of the beeches. A few of the common spiders (including Miturga sp., the mai
n spider eaten by mice) were also more abundant after beech seeding. Analys
is of the long-term records of hard beech seeding, numbers of mice, and num
bers of adults of the moth Gymnobathra tholodella (Oecophoridae) showed tha
t the number of mice was positively correlated with both the number of beec
h seeds and the number of moths. These results indicate a more complex web
of interactions in beech forest than was earlier suggested, but because the
intensity of flowering in spring largely determines the numbers of both Le
pidoptera larvae and beech seeds, the role of each in the population increa
se of mice can not be determined.