Biological and environmental effects on fine-scale seed dispersal of an invasive tree in a secondary subtropical forest

被引:0
|
作者
Priscila A. Powell
Ezequiel Aráoz
机构
[1] CONICET & Universidad Nacional de Tucumán,Instituto de Ecología Regional
[2] Universidad Nacional de Tucumán,Cátedra de Ecología General, Facultad de Ciencias Naturales e IML
[3] Universidad Nacional de Tucumán,Cátedra de Ecología del Paisaje, Facultad de Ciencias Naturales e IML
来源
Biological Invasions | 2018年 / 20卷
关键词
Dispersal kernel; Yungas; Bird-mediated dispersal;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Dispersal abilities of invading species emerge from the interaction between the species and some features of the target community. Ligustrum lucidum is a tree species invading different ecosystems. Major spatial patterns of Ligustrum invasions and their ecological consequences have been analyzed, but no study addressed the dispersal process at a fine scale, assessing the effects of different biological and environmental factors. Ligustrum lucidum is an ornithochoric species. The structure of the environment determines bird movements and thus affects seed dispersal. We used inverse modeling to analyze bird-mediated dispersal of L. lucidum seeds in a secondary Yungas forest and surrounding crop-fields. We assessed the effects of egestion mode (regurgitation and defecation) and tree density (as an environment character) on seed dispersal. Seed dispersal presented different spatial patterns depending on the egestion mode. Tree density was positively associated with the number of regurgitated dispersed seeds and negatively associated with the number of defecated dispersed seeds. In both cases, dispersal distance increased in open areas, but absence of perches inhibited seed arrival. Thus, spread of L. lucidum is facilitated in open areas with some trees; inside the native forest, short distance dispersal facilitates the gradual invasion by this exotic species. Our results suggest that processes like crop abandonment and forest succession, which are active in subtropical montane systems, may facilitate L. lucidum invasion. Our seed dispersal models should be combined with actual distribution maps of L. lucidum to identify areas vulnerable to new invasions.
引用
收藏
页码:461 / 473
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Fine-scale environmental heterogeneity and spatial niche partitioning among spring-flowering forest herbs
    Beck, Jared J.
    Givnish, Thomas J.
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 2021, 108 (01) : 63 - 73
  • [42] Fine-scale spatial genetic structure of Dalbergia nigra (Fabaceae), a threatened and endemic tree of the Brazilian Atlantic Forest
    de Oliveira Buzatti, Renata Santiago
    Ribeiro, Renata Acacio
    de Lemos Filho, Jose Pires
    Lovato, Maria Bernadete
    GENETICS AND MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 2012, 35 (04) : 838 - 846
  • [43] Can fine-scale habitats of limestone outcrops be considered litho-refugia for dry forest tree lineages?
    Natalia de Aguiar-Campos
    Vinícius Andrade Maia
    Wilder Bento da Silva
    Cléber Rodrigo de Souza
    Rubens Manoel dos Santos
    Biodiversity and Conservation, 2020, 29 : 1009 - 1026
  • [44] Can fine-scale habitats of limestone outcrops be considered litho-refugia for dry forest tree lineages?
    de Aguiar-Campos, Natalia
    Maia, Vinicius Andrade
    da Silva, Wilder Bento
    de Souza, Cleber Rodrigo
    dos Santos, Rubens Manoel
    BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION, 2020, 29 (03) : 1009 - 1026
  • [45] Landscape genetic analyses reveal fine-scale effects of forest fragmentation in an insular tropical bird
    Khimoun, Aurelie
    Peterman, William
    Eraud, Cyril
    Faivre, Bruno
    Navarro, Nicolas
    Garnier, Stephane
    MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2017, 26 (19) : 4906 - 4919
  • [46] Population genetic structure and connectivity of a riparian selfing herb Caulokaempferia coenobialis at a fine-scale geographic level in subtropical monsoon forest
    Fu, Qiong
    Deng, Jie
    Chen, Min
    Zhong, Yan
    Lu, Guo-Hui
    Wang, Ying-Qiang
    BMC PLANT BIOLOGY, 2021, 21 (01)
  • [47] Population genetic structure and connectivity of a riparian selfing herb Caulokaempferia coenobialis at a fine-scale geographic level in subtropical monsoon forest
    Qiong Fu
    Jie Deng
    Min Chen
    Yan Zhong
    Guo-Hui Lu
    Ying-Qiang Wang
    BMC Plant Biology, 21
  • [48] Secondary seed dispersal by dung beetles in a Colombian rain forest: effects of dung type and defecation pattern on seed fate
    Santos-Heredia, Carolina
    Andresen, Ellen
    Zarate, Diego A.
    JOURNAL OF TROPICAL ECOLOGY, 2010, 26 : 355 - 364
  • [49] Does the seed fall far from the tree? Weak fine-scale genetic structure in a continuous Scots pine population
    Niskanen, Alina K.
    Kujala, Sonja T.
    Karkkainen, Katri
    Savolainen, Outi
    Pyhajarvi, Tanja
    PEER COMMUNITY JOURNAL, 2024, 4
  • [50] Effects of seed bank disturbance on the fine-scale genetic structure of populations of the rare shrub Grevillea macleayana
    P R England
    R J Whelan
    D J Ayre
    Heredity, 2003, 91 : 475 - 480