Bliege Bird Rebecca, Bird Douglas W, Martine Christopher T, McGuire Chloe, Greenwood Leanne, Taylor Desmond, Williams Tanisha M, Veth Peter M
The Pennsylvania State University, Department of Anthropology, University Park, PA, 16801, USA.
Department of Biology, Bucknell University, 1 Dent Drive, Lewisburg, PA, 17837, USA.
Nat Commun. 2024 Jul 17;15(1):6019. doi: 10.1038/s41467-024-50300-5.
Commensal relationships between wild plants and their dispersers play a key ecological and evolutionary role in community structure and function. While non-human dispersers are often considered critical to plant recruitment, human dispersers have received much less attention, especially when it comes to non-domesticated plants. Australia, as a continent historically characterized by economies reliant on non-domesticated plants, is thus a key system for exploring the ecological role of people as seed dispersers in the absence of agriculture. Here, we utilize a controlled observation research design, employing ecological surveys and ethnographic observations to examine how seed dispersal and landscape burning by Martu Aboriginal people affects the distribution of three preferred plants and one (edible, but non-preferred) control species. Using an information theoretic approach, we find that the three preferred plants show evidence of human dispersal, with the strongest evidence supporting anthropogenic dispersal for the wild bush tomato, Solanum diversiflorum.
野生植物与其传播者之间的共生关系在群落结构和功能中起着关键的生态和进化作用。虽然非人类传播者通常被认为对植物繁殖至关重要,但人类传播者受到的关注要少得多,尤其是在涉及非驯化植物时。澳大利亚作为一个历史上以依赖非驯化植物的经济为特征的大陆,因此是探索在没有农业的情况下人类作为种子传播者的生态作用的关键系统。在这里,我们采用了一种对照观察研究设计,利用生态调查和人种学观察来研究马尔图原住民的种子传播和景观焚烧如何影响三种首选植物和一种(可食用但非首选)对照物种的分布。使用信息论方法,我们发现这三种首选植物显示出人类传播的证据,最有力的证据支持野生灌木番茄(Solanum diversiflorum)的人为传播。