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The relevance of ants as seed rescuers of a primarily bird-dispersed tree in the Neotropical cerrado savanna. | LitMetric

The relevance of ants as seed rescuers of a primarily bird-dispersed tree in the Neotropical cerrado savanna.

Oecologia

Departamento de Zoologia, Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Campinas, SP, Brazil.

Published: July 2009

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how different animals, like birds and ants, affect seed dispersal and diversity of the melastome plant, Miconia rubiginosa, in Brazilian savanna.
  • Birds removed nearly a quarter of the fruit from trees but often dropped fruits close to the parent plant, while ants played a significant role in removing fallen fruits on the ground, especially from smaller crops.
  • The research highlights that while ants and birds influence dispersal in different ways, ants are crucial for local population dynamics and seed rain distribution, emphasizing their importance as "rescuers" of seeds that may not travel far.

Article Abstract

The scale at which seed dispersal operates has many implications for the spatial patterns of plant recruitment and diversity. We investigated the effect of short- (ants) and long-distance (birds) seed dispersal of the fleshy-fruited melastome, Miconia rubiginosa, in the Brazilian savanna. We estimated the contribution of dispersal vectors to the removal of the fruit crop from the canopy (birds), and once seeds have reached the cerrado floor (ants) over two fruiting seasons. Birds (13 species) removed up to 23.7% of the fruit crop from the crown, but dropped a substantial proportion of fruits beneath the parent plant. Birds removed a greater proportion of fruits from trees producing large fruit crops, as predicted by the fruit crop size hypothesis. However, up to 18.9% of the fruit crop fell beneath the parent plant as ripe fruit. Most fallen fruits were removed by ants (seven genera), which are likely to play a relatively important role in terms of the quantity of seeds dispersed, especially for plants producing small fruit crops (a conceptual model is presented). Birds and ants did not influence seed germination, but they differ in terms of the spatial scale of dispersal and deposition patterns. Ants probably play an important role in the local population dynamics of Miconia, whereas birds are responsible for long-distance dispersal associated with the colonization of new patches and metapopulation dynamics. By removing seeds from bird droppings, ants may also reshape at a finer scale the seed rain generated by primary dispersers. Indeed, seedlings and saplings of Miconia are more frequently found around leaf-cutter ant nests than in control areas away from ant nests or around large Miconia trees. The quantitative component of dispersal effectiveness by ants acting as "rescuers" of seeds that fail to be dispersed, or fall under parent trees, is probably more important than currently recognized in other systems.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00442-009-1349-2DOI Listing

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