Clark C J, Poulsen J R, Connor E F, Parker V T
School of Natural Resources and Environment and Department of Zoology, University of Florida, 223 Bartram Hall, Gainesville, FL 32611-8525, USA.
Oecologia. 2004 Mar;139(1):66-75. doi: 10.1007/s00442-003-1483-1. Epub 2004 Jan 27.
Quantification of seed rain patterns is an initial step toward explaining variation in plant recruitment, and consequently, organization of forest communities. Spatially contagious patterns of seed deposition, where seeds are patchily dispersed with some sites receiving relatively high densities and others receiving low densities of seeds, may be a common phenomenon for which we have very little knowledge. For example, prior feeding events by frugivores (monkeys and birds) combined with transport and dispersal of seeds to other fruiting trees may result in the contagious deposition of non-conspecific seeds below them. Here, we examined whether fruiting trees act as dispersal foci in the semi-deciduous tropical rainforest of the Dja Reserve, Cameroon. Seed rain was sampled below the canopies of nine tree species: three typically dispersed by large, frugivorous birds, three dispersed by monkeys, and three dispersed by wind. We found no evidence that monkeys generate spatially contagious patterns of seed rain under fruiting trees at which they feed. However, we found that rates of deposition of non-conspecific seeds and species richness of seeds delivered by birds (hornbills and turacos) were significantly greater during fruiting than non-fruiting periods, and significantly greater under fruiting individuals of bird-dispersed tree species than under fruiting individuals of monkey- or wind-dispersed tree species. Additionally, during fruiting periods, the composition of non-conspecific seed rain under bird-dispersed tree species was more similar to other bird-dispersed trees than to monkey- or wind-dispersed tree species. The contagious dispersal of non-conspecific seeds to fruiting, bird-dispersed trees leads to higher seed densities under fruiting trees than those caused by local seed production. Non-conspecific seeds deposited in high densities may experience increased seed mortality even far from parent trees if predators are generalists. Alternatively, in the absence of complete density-dependent mortality, contagious seed dispersal could result in associations among species dispersed by the same dispersal agent.
量化种子雨模式是解释植物更新变化进而解释森林群落组织的第一步。种子沉积的空间传染性模式,即种子呈斑块状分布,一些地点接收的种子密度相对较高,而其他地点接收的种子密度较低,可能是一种我们知之甚少的常见现象。例如,食果动物(猴子和鸟类)先前的取食活动,再加上种子被运输和散布到其他结果树上,可能会导致非同种种子在其下方的传染性沉积。在此,我们研究了结果树在喀麦隆贾保护区的半落叶热带雨林中是否充当扩散中心。在九种树种的树冠下对种子雨进行了采样:三种通常由大型食果鸟类传播,三种由猴子传播,三种由风传播。我们没有发现证据表明猴子在它们取食的结果树下产生种子雨的空间传染性模式。然而,我们发现,鸟类(犀鸟和蕉鹃)传播的非同种种子的沉积率和种子物种丰富度在结果期比非结果期显著更高,并且在鸟类传播树种的结果个体下方比在猴子或风传播树种的结果个体下方显著更高。此外,在结果期,鸟类传播树种下方的非同种种子雨的组成与其他鸟类传播的树比与猴子或风传播的树更相似。非同种种子向结果的、鸟类传播的树的传染性扩散导致结果树下的种子密度高于本地种子生产所导致的密度。如果捕食者是泛化种,即使远离母树,高密度沉积的非同种种子也可能经历更高的种子死亡率。或者,在没有完全密度依赖死亡率的情况下,传染性种子扩散可能导致由同一扩散媒介传播的物种之间产生关联。