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granivores

Granivores are animals whose diet consists primarily of seeds. While many herbivores consume seeds opportunistically, granivory denotes a feeding niche in which seeds are the dominant or exclusive food source. Granivores occur in diverse taxa, including birds (such as finches, sparrows, pigeons), mammals (such as mice, voles, gerbils), insects (seed beetles, weevils), and some reptiles. In birds, conical or stout short beaks are common adaptations for cracking and processing hard seed coats; many granivorous birds also possess muscular gizzards for mechanical digestion. Rodents often have strong incisors and molars specialized for gnawing and grinding seeds.

Ecologically, granivores influence plant populations through seed predation and sometimes dispersal. By consuming seeds, they can

In agriculture and human contexts, granivory includes seed predation that damages crops and stored grains, making

limit
recruitment
of
some
plant
species,
but
caching
behavior
can
lead
to
seed
dispersal
if
cached
seeds
are
not
retrieved.
Some
seeds
survive
digestion
and
germinate
after
gut
passage,
a
process
known
as
endozoochory.
Granivores
also
select
seeds
based
on
size,
hardness,
nutritional
content,
and
secondary
compounds,
shaping
plant–granivore
interactions.
The
granivorous
diet
is
often
seasonal
and
flexible;
many
granivores
supplement
seeds
with
fruits,
vegetation,
or
invertebrates
when
seeds
are
scarce.
granivorous
species
common
pests.
Research
on
granivores
contributes
to
understanding
foraging
strategies,
seed
selection,
and
the
ecological
consequences
of
seed
communities.