Snakes Spread Plant Seeds Via The Rodents They Eat

HomeBig BoxesMore Reptile Reading

Snakes Spread Plant Seeds Via The Rodents They Eat

Researchers say the role of snakes as ecosystem servicers should be further studied.

USARK Update Oct. 2014: Dangerous Wild Animal Board Violates Due Process
Woman In Hawaii Captures Invasive Iguana On Video, Which Goes Viral On Social Media
5 Popular Ways To Find Reptiles And Amphibians In The Wild

Snakes have an important role in not only keeping rodent populations in check, but may also responsible for the dispersal of plant seeds that the rodents eat, according to a new study published in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

Advertisement
Corn snake eating a mouse

Joel Kempson/Shutterstock

Researchers say the role of snakes as ecosystem servicers should be further studied.
 

Their paper, “Seed ingestion and germination in rattlesnakes: overlooked agents of rescue and secondary dispersal” says that snakes could be integral in the dispersal of seeds and may benefit the ecology of terrestrial plants. While raptors, coyotes, and other animals that feed on rodents are known seed dispersers, the role of snakes as seed dispersers is still unknown.


Want To Learn More?

Two-headed Timber Rattlesnake Found In Arkansas

Advertisement

Top 10 Venomous North American Snakes


So, the researchers examined the stomach content of 50 snakes from museum collections and found prey items in 22 of the snakes for a total of 36 rodents. From within the rodents, they found 971 seeds, 19 of which germinated, and 11 of which were inside a single snake.

This was enough evidence, the researchers said, to claim that three North American rattlesnake species that they studied could spread viable plant seeds by eating the rodents and dispersing the seeds when they poop. 

The researchers did say that there are other snake species that eat seed-eating rodents, so further study is needed to determine the efficacy of the seed dispersal.

Advertisement

An abstract of the research paper can be read on the Proceedings of the Royal Society B website