Tsunamoto Yoshihiro, Koike Shinsuke, Tayasu Ichiro, Masaki Takashi, Kato Shuri, Kikuchi Satoshi, Nagamitsu Teruyoshi, Haraguchi Takashi F, Naganuma Tomoko, Naoe Shoji
Tohoku Research Center, Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute, Morioka, Iwate, Japan.
Environment and Geology, Research Institute of Energy, Hokkaido Research Organization, Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan.
Oecologia. 2025 Jan 24;207(1):24. doi: 10.1007/s00442-025-05663-x.
Vertical seed dispersal towards higher or lower altitudes is an important process for plants' adaptation to climate change. Although many plants depend on animals for seed dispersal, studies on vertical seed dispersal by animals, determined by complex animal behaviours, are scarce. Previous studies hypothesised that animals inhabiting temperate regions disperse seeds uphill in spring/summer and downhill in autumn/winter due to their seasonal movement following the altitudinal gradients in food phenology. However, this hypothesis has only been tested in seed dispersal by mammals on one mountain range. Vertical seed dispersal by birds might differ from that by mammals, and frugivorous megafauna extinction and mountain topography may affect seed dispersal patterns. Here we assessed the vertical seed dispersal of summer and summer-to-autumn fruiting cherries by mammals and birds across three Japanese mountain ranges, two of them with presence of a megafauna, the Asian black bear. We found strong uphill seed dispersal of summer fruiting cherry species and weak downhill seed dispersal of summer-to-autumn fruiting cherry species, irrespective of the frugivore community and mountain topography. These indicate that the fruiting phenology affects the direction of vertical seed dispersal by mammals and birds across mountains. Mammals and birds dispersed seeds over a similar vertical profile, although birds are likely to be low-quantity seed dispersers. The absence of bears, which dispersed the majority of the seeds, was not compensated by the remaining mammal species. The results suggest that the fruiting phenology and megafauna presence affect whether animal-dispersed temperate plants can migrate efficiently under climate change.
向更高或更低海拔的垂直种子传播是植物适应气候变化的重要过程。尽管许多植物依靠动物进行种子传播,但关于由复杂动物行为决定的动物垂直种子传播的研究却很匮乏。先前的研究假设,栖息在温带地区的动物由于其季节性移动遵循食物物候的海拔梯度,在春季/夏季将种子向上坡传播,在秋季/冬季向下坡传播。然而,这一假设仅在一个山脉上通过哺乳动物的种子传播进行了测试。鸟类的垂直种子传播可能与哺乳动物不同,食果大型动物的灭绝和山地地形可能会影响种子传播模式。在这里,我们评估了哺乳动物和鸟类在日本的三个山脉上对夏季和夏末至秋季结果的樱桃的垂直种子传播情况,其中两个山脉有大型动物亚洲黑熊存在。我们发现,无论食果动物群落和山地地形如何,夏季结果的樱桃物种有强烈的向上坡种子传播,而夏末至秋季结果的樱桃物种向下坡种子传播较弱。这些表明结果物候影响了哺乳动物和鸟类跨山脉垂直种子传播的方向。哺乳动物和鸟类在相似的垂直范围内传播种子,尽管鸟类可能是少量种子传播者。分散了大部分种子的熊的缺失,并没有被其余的哺乳动物物种所弥补。结果表明,结果物候和大型动物的存在影响了动物传播的温带植物在气候变化下能否有效迁移。