Andresen Ellen, Levey Douglas J
Centro de Investigaciones en Ecosistemas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Apartado Postal 27-3, C.P. 58089, Morelia, Michoacán, Mexico.
Oecologia. 2004 Mar;139(1):45-54. doi: 10.1007/s00442-003-1480-4. Epub 2004 Jan 22.
Seeds dispersed by tropical, arboreal mammals are usually deposited singly and without dung or in clumps of fecal material. After dispersal through defecation by mammals, most seeds are secondarily dispersed by dung beetles or consumed by rodents. These post-dispersal, plant-animal interactions are likely to interact themselves, as seeds buried by dung beetles are less likely to be found by rodents than unburied seeds. In a series of three experiments with seeds of 15 species in central Amazonia (Brazil), we determined (1) how presence and amount of dung associated with seeds influences long-term seed fate and seedling establishment, (2) how deeply dung beetles bury seeds and how burial depth affects seedling establishment, and (3) how seed size affects the interaction between seeds, dung beetles, and rodents. Our overall goal was to understand how post-dispersal plant-animal interactions determine the link between primary seed dispersal and seedling establishment. On average, 43% of seeds surrounded by dung were buried by dung beetles, compared to 0% of seeds not surrounded by dung ( n=2,156). Seeds in dung, however, tended to be more prone than bare seeds to predation by rodents. Of seeds in dung, probability of burial was negatively related to seed size and positively related to amount of dung. Burial of seeds decreased the probability of seed predation by rodents three-fold, and increased the probability of seedling establishment two-fold. Mean burial depth was 4 cm (0.5-20 cm) and was not related to seed size, contrary to previous studies. Probability of seedling establishment was negatively correlated with burial depth and not related to seed size at 5 or 10 cm depths. These results illustrate a complex web of interactions among dung beetles, rodents, and dispersed seeds. These interactions affect the probability of seedling establishment and are themselves strongly tied to how seeds are deposited by primary dispersers. More generally, our results emphasize the importance of looking beyond a single type of plant-animal interaction (e.g., seed dispersal or seed predation) to incorporate potential effects of interacting interactions.
由热带树栖哺乳动物传播的种子通常单个沉积,没有粪便包裹,或者成团地存在于粪便物质中。在通过哺乳动物排便进行传播后,大多数种子会被蜣螂二次传播,或者被啮齿动物吃掉。这些传播后的植物 - 动物相互作用可能会相互影响,因为被蜣螂掩埋的种子比未掩埋的种子被啮齿动物发现的可能性更小。在巴西亚马逊中部对15种植物种子进行的一系列三项实验中,我们确定了:(1)与种子相关的粪便的存在和数量如何影响种子的长期命运和幼苗建立;(2)蜣螂将种子埋入地下的深度以及埋藏深度如何影响幼苗建立;(3)种子大小如何影响种子、蜣螂和啮齿动物之间的相互作用。我们的总体目标是了解传播后的植物 - 动物相互作用如何决定初级种子传播与幼苗建立之间的联系。平均而言,被粪便包围的种子中有43%被蜣螂掩埋,而未被粪便包围的种子这一比例为0%(n = 2156)。然而,粪便中的种子比裸露的种子更容易被啮齿动物捕食。在粪便中的种子,被掩埋的概率与种子大小呈负相关,与粪便数量呈正相关。种子被掩埋使被啮齿动物捕食的概率降低了三倍,并使幼苗建立的概率增加了两倍。平均埋藏深度为4厘米(0.5 - 20厘米),与种子大小无关,这与之前的研究结果相反。在5厘米或10厘米深度时,幼苗建立的概率与埋藏深度呈负相关,与种子大小无关。这些结果说明了蜣螂、啮齿动物和传播的种子之间存在复杂的相互作用网络。这些相互作用影响幼苗建立的概率,并且它们本身与初级传播者如何沉积种子密切相关。更普遍地说,我们的结果强调了超越单一类型的植物 - 动物相互作用(例如种子传播或种子捕食)来纳入相互作用的潜在影响的重要性。