Faculty of Environmental Sciences and Natural Resource Management, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, P.O. Box 5003, 1432, Ås, Norway.
Ecology. 2017 Dec;98(12):3165-3174. doi: 10.1002/ecy.2038. Epub 2017 Nov 8.
Seed removal can influence plant community dynamics, composition, and resulting vegetation characteristics. In the African savanna, termites and large herbivores influence vegetation in various ways, likely including indirect effects on seed predators and secondary dispersers. However, the intensity and variation of seed removal rates in African savannas has seldom been studied. We experimentally investigated whether termites and large herbivores were important factors in the mechanisms contributing to observed patterns in tree species composition on and off mounds, in Lake Mburo National Park, Uganda. Within fenced (excluding large herbivores) and unfenced termite mound and adjacent savanna plots, we placed seeds of nine native tree species within small open "cages," accessed by all animals, roofed cages that only allowed access to small vertebrates and invertebrates, and closed cages that permitted access by smaller invertebrates only (5 mm wire mesh). We found that mean seed removal rate was high (up to 87.3% per 3 d). Mound habitats experienced significantly higher removal rates than off-mound habitats. The mean removal rate of native seeds from closed cages was 11.1% per 3 d compared with 19.4% and 23.3% removed per 3 d in the roofed and open cages, respectively. Smaller seeds experienced higher removal rates than larger seeds. Large herbivore exclusion on mounds reduced native seed removal rates by a mean of 8.8% in the open cages, but increased removal rates by 1.7% in the open cages when off-mound habitats were fenced. While removal rates from open cages were higher on active mounds (30.9%) than on inactive mounds (26.7%), the removal rates from closed cages were lower on active vs. inactive mounds (6.1% vs. 11.6%, respectively). Thus, we conclude that large herbivores and Macrotermes mounds influence seed removal rates, though these effects appear indirect.
种子移除会影响植物群落的动态、组成和产生的植被特征。在非洲稀树草原,白蚁和大型食草动物以各种方式影响植被,可能包括对种子捕食者和二次传播者的间接影响。然而,非洲稀树草原种子移除率的强度和变化很少被研究。我们在乌干达姆布罗湖国家公园实验性地研究了白蚁和大型食草动物是否是导致观察到的树木物种组成模式的机制中的重要因素,这些模式出现在蚁丘上和蚁丘下,以及在周围的稀树草原上。在有围栏(排除大型食草动物)和无围栏的白蚁丘和相邻的稀树草原地块内,我们在小的开放“笼子”内放置了 9 种本地树种的种子,这些“笼子”可以被所有动物进入,有屋顶的笼子只允许小型脊椎动物和无脊椎动物进入,封闭的笼子只允许较小的无脊椎动物进入(5 毫米的金属网)。我们发现,平均种子移除率很高(每 3 天高达 87.3%)。蚁丘栖息地的移除率明显高于非蚁丘栖息地。与封闭笼中的 11.1%相比,封闭笼中本地种子的平均移除率分别为 19.4%和 23.3%,在有屋顶和开放笼中分别为 3 天。较小的种子的移除率高于较大的种子。在有蚁丘的地方,大型食草动物的排除使开放笼中的本地种子移除率平均降低了 8.8%,但当非蚁丘栖息地被围栏围住时,开放笼中的移除率增加了 1.7%。虽然开放笼中来自活跃蚁丘的移除率(30.9%)高于非活跃蚁丘(26.7%),但来自封闭笼的移除率在活跃蚁丘上(6.1%)低于非活跃蚁丘(11.6%)。因此,我们得出结论,大型食草动物和巨白蚁丘影响种子移除率,尽管这些影响似乎是间接的。