Ghost peppers are saving U.S. grasslands—by scaring off hungry mice

Authored by sciencemag.org and submitted by SirT6
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Ghost peppers are saving U.S. grasslands—by scaring off hungry mice

Conservationists trying to restore the United States’s grasslands kept running into a problem: As soon as they planted the seeds meant to bring back native flora, hungry mice would gobble them up. In an effort to deter the rodents, biologists tried coating the seeds with capsaicin, the active ingredient that gives chili peppers their signature fiery taste. It worked: Dusting the seeds with chili powder reduced the number of seeds consumed by deer mice by 86%, researchers report in Restoration Ecology .

The hot discovery required some trial and error. One big challenge was finding a chili powder that would deter the mice but not prevent the seeds from germinating. Another was finding a coating that wouldn’t weather away after a few months outdoors. After 4 years of laboratory and field experiments in Montana’s Missoula Valley, researchers found a workable recipe. A powder made from the Bhut jolokia, or ghost pepper, from India—considered to be one of the world’s hottest chilis—did the trick.

The scientists suggest their findings demonstrate how nontoxic, natural plant defense compounds—such as capsaicin—can be used to aid restoration efforts.

Artanthos on August 6th, 2018 at 00:20 UTC »

Peppers evolved capsaicin so that their seeds would not be eaten by rodents.

Capsaicin does not affect birds, who do eat peppers.

Bird digestive tracks are less aggressive than that of rodents. Birds pass the pepper seeds with the outer shell weakened but intact, distributing the seeds.

Tldr: capsaicin works because it was evolved to deter rodents.

Javeit on August 5th, 2018 at 21:46 UTC »

Lol. At first I read “Conversationalists” and was so confused.

Wupta on August 5th, 2018 at 21:35 UTC »

That’s funny, my wife every spring plants sunflower seeds, this year we didn’t get a single plant but we got mice which were eating all the seeds. We trapped them but next year we’re gonna try this method. Watch out for that ring of 🔥!