Department of Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology, Colorado State University, 1474 Campus Delivery, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2012 Sep;22(6):1718-32. doi: 10.1890/11-1613.1.
Species loss can lead to cascading effects on communities, including the disruption of ecological processes such as seed dispersal. The endangered 'Alalā (Corvus hawaiiensis), the largest remaining species of native Hawaiian forest bird, was once common in mesic and dry forests on the Big Island of Hawai'i, but today it exists solely in captivity. Prior to its extinction in the wild, the 'Alalā may have helped to establish and maintain native Hawaiian forest communities by dispersing seeds of a wide variety of native plants. In the absence of 'Alalā, the structure and composition of Hawai'i's forests may be changing, and some large-fruited plants may be dispersal limited, persisting primarily as ecological anachronisms. We fed captive 'Alalā a variety of native fruits, documented behaviors relating to seed dispersal, and measured the germination success of seeds that passed through the gut of 'Alalā relative to the germination success of seeds in control groups. 'Alalā ate and carried 14 native fruits and provided germination benefits to several species by ingesting their seeds. Our results suggest that some plants rely heavily on 'Alalā for these services. In captivity, juvenile birds displayed seed dispersal behaviors more often than adult birds for most fruiting plants in our study. We introduced captive 'Alalā to two large-fruited, dry-forest plants, not previously recorded as 'Alalā food resources, but which may once have been part of their natural diet. The seed dispersal behavior that 'Alalā displayed toward these species supports the inclusion of dry and mesic forests in 'Alalā habitat restoration plans and adds weight to the idea that plant dispersal limitation may contribute to the rarity of these plants. Our study provides evidence that 'Alalā have the capacity to play a vital role in maintaining the diversity of fruiting plants in native Hawaiian forests through seed dispersal and enhanced seed germination, thus adding greater urgency to efforts to restore 'Alalā to their former range.
物种的丧失可能会对群落产生级联效应,包括破坏生态过程,如种子传播。濒危的“夏威夷乌鸦”(Corvus hawaiiensis)是夏威夷本土森林鸟类中最大的现存物种,曾经在夏威夷大岛的湿润和干燥森林中很常见,但如今它仅存在于圈养环境中。在野外灭绝之前,“夏威夷乌鸦”可能通过传播各种本地植物的种子,帮助建立和维持夏威夷本土森林群落。在没有“夏威夷乌鸦”的情况下,夏威夷的森林结构和组成可能正在发生变化,一些大型水果植物可能传播受限,主要作为生态时代错误而存在。我们给圈养的“夏威夷乌鸦”喂食了各种本地水果,记录了与种子传播有关的行为,并测量了通过“夏威夷乌鸦”肠道的种子的发芽成功率与对照组种子的发芽成功率。“夏威夷乌鸦”吃了 14 种本地水果,并通过吞食它们的种子为几种物种提供了发芽益处。我们的研究结果表明,一些植物严重依赖“夏威夷乌鸦”提供这些服务。在圈养环境中,与我们研究中的大多数结果显示,幼鸟比成年鸟更经常表现出种子传播行为。我们向两种大型水果植物引入了圈养的“夏威夷乌鸦”,这两种植物以前没有被记录为“夏威夷乌鸦”的食物来源,但它们可能曾经是其天然饮食的一部分。“夏威夷乌鸦”对这些物种表现出的种子传播行为支持将干燥和湿润森林纳入“夏威夷乌鸦”栖息地恢复计划,并为植物传播限制可能导致这些植物稀有这一观点提供了更多依据。我们的研究提供了证据,表明“夏威夷乌鸦”有能力通过种子传播和增强种子发芽,在维持夏威夷本土森林中结果植物的多样性方面发挥重要作用,从而增加了将“夏威夷乌鸦”恢复到其原有范围的紧迫性。