Departamento de Botânica, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais-Belo Horizonte, Brazil.
Departamento de Biologia Geral, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais-Belo Horizonte, Brazil.
PLoS One. 2018 Aug 29;13(8):e0202435. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0202435. eCollection 2018.
The balance between the costs and benefits of fleshy fruit production depends on the feeding behavior of their seed dispersers, which might effectively disperse seeds to farther areas or drop beneath parent plants some diaspores they handle during frugivory bouts. Nevertheless, the consequences of variation in fruit handling by primary seed dispersers on the secondary removal of diaspores remains poorly understood. We conducted a field study to determine how variation in fruit handling by avian frugivores affects short-term secondary removal of Miconia irwinii (Melastomataceae) diaspores by the ground-dwelling fauna in campo rupestre vegetation, southeastern Brazil. We conducted factorial experiments manipulating: (1) different outcomes of primary fruit/seed removal by birds, (2) distances of diaspore deposition from conspecifics, and (3) the access of ants and vertebrates to diaspores. We showed that secondary removal of diaspores was highly variable at the population scale, with an overall low removal rate by the ground-dwelling fauna (13% seeds, 19% fruits). However, we found that gut-passed seeds embedded in bird feces were less removed than seeds expelled from fruits. Gut-passed seeds were more likely to be removed by ant species acting as secondary dispersers, whereas pulp-free seeds dropped by birds were likely to interact with potential seed predators, including ants and rodents. We found no clear effect of dispersal from parent plant vicinity on seed removal, but fruit removal was significantly higher near parent plants. Partially defleshed fruits were more removed than intact fruits. The removal of fruits by ant and vertebrate rescuers, including lizards and birds, might reduce the costs of interactions with less effective dispersers that drop partially defleshed fruits under parent plants. Our study highlights that variation in fruit handling by primary avian seed dispersers mediate subsequent interactions among discarded diaspores and ground-dwelling animals, potentially affecting final seed fates. Moreover, we argue that escape-related benefits of dispersal can be contingent on how primary dispersers handle and discard seeds.
肉质果实生产的成本与收益之间的平衡取决于其种子传播者的取食行为,这些行为可能会有效地将种子传播到更远的地方,或者在取食过程中将一些处理过的种子丢弃在母株下方。然而,初级种子传播者在处理果实方面的变化对二次传播的影响仍知之甚少。我们进行了一项野外研究,以确定鸟类取食者在处理果实方面的变化如何影响巴西东南部岩石场植被中地面动物对 Miconia irwinii(Melastomataceae)种子的短期二次传播。我们进行了因子实验,操纵了:(1)鸟类对果实/种子的初级去除的不同结果,(2)种子传播距离与同种个体的距离,以及(3)蚂蚁和脊椎动物对种子的接触。我们表明,种子的二次传播在种群尺度上具有高度的可变性,地面动物的整体传播率较低(种子 13%,果实 19%)。然而,我们发现,嵌入鸟类粪便中的消化过的种子比从果实中排出的种子传播得更慢。被蚂蚁等二次传播者传播的种子更有可能被传播,而鸟类掉落的无果肉种子更有可能与潜在的种子捕食者相互作用,包括蚂蚁和啮齿动物。我们没有发现从母株附近传播对种子传播的明显影响,但靠近母株的果实传播率更高。部分去果肉的果实比完整的果实更容易被传播。蚂蚁和包括蜥蜴和鸟类在内的脊椎动物救援者对果实的传播可能会降低与那些将部分去果肉的果实丢弃在母株下方的效率较低的传播者之间相互作用的成本。我们的研究表明,初级鸟类种子传播者在处理果实方面的变化会影响到随后被丢弃的种子与地面动物之间的相互作用,从而可能影响到最终的种子命运。此外,我们认为,传播的逃避相关利益可能取决于初级传播者如何处理和丢弃种子。