Seed retention times in New Zealand's largest gecko, Hoplodactylus duvaucelii, and implications for seed dispersal

被引:0
|
作者
Alena, Hayley [1 ]
Wotton, Debra M. [2 ,3 ]
Perry, George L. W. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Auckland, Sch Environm, Private Bag 92019, Auckland, New Zealand
[2] Moas Ark Res, Paraparaumu, New Zealand
[3] Univ Canterbury, Biol Sci, Christchurch, New Zealand
来源
NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY | 2023年 / 47卷 / 01期
关键词
Duvaucel's gecko; gut passage time; lizard; reptile; POST-TRANSLOCATION DISPERSAL; GUT-PASSAGE TIME; GERMINATION; LIZARD; CONSEQUENCES; BEHAVIOR; RELEASE; ISLAND;
D O I
10.20417/nzjecol.47.3539
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Fruit is an important component in the diet of many lizards, but their role as seed dispersers is often overlooked. Seed retention time and animal movement determine how far a fleshy fruited seed will be dispersed from the parent plant. Seed retention times were investigated in 78 captive Hoplodactylus duvaucelii (Duvaucel's geckos). Geckos were offered fruits from 10 plant species. Fifty-one geckos consumed fruits and the mean seed retention time was 69 hours (range 31 to 145 hours). There was no difference between the mean seed retention in adult males and females, but juvenile geckos had significantly shorter mean seed retention times. There was no relationship between seed retention time and body mass in adult geckos. Based on their seed retention times, we suggest Duvaucel's geckos and other native lizards with body mass & GE; 14 g could disperse seeds over 10 m away from the parent plant.
引用
收藏
页数:6
相关论文
共 42 条
  • [21] Oak habitat recovery on California's largest islands: Scenarios for the role of corvid seed dispersal
    Pesendorfer, Mario B.
    Baker, Christopher M.
    Stringer, Martin
    McDonald-Madden, Eve
    Bode, Michael
    McEachern, A. Kathryn
    Morrison, Scott A.
    Sillett, T. Scott
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 2018, 55 (03) : 1185 - 1194
  • [22] Introduction of mammalian seed predators and the loss of an endemic flightless bird impair seed dispersal of the New Zealand tree Elaeocarpus dentatus
    Carpenter, Joanna K.
    Kelly, Dave
    Moltchanova, Elena
    O'Donnell, Colin F. J.
    ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2018, 8 (12): : 5992 - 6004
  • [23] An introduced species helping another: dispersal of a rose seed infesting wasp by a marsupial in New Zealand
    Carlos Rouco
    Grant Norbury
    Biological Invasions, 2013, 15 : 1649 - 1652
  • [24] An introduced species helping another: dispersal of a rose seed infesting wasp by a marsupial in New Zealand
    Rouco, Carlos
    Norbury, Grant
    BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS, 2013, 15 (08) : 1649 - 1652
  • [25] Animal-mediated seed dispersal in India: Implications for conservation of India's biodiversity
    Sengupta, Asmita
    BIOTROPICA, 2022, 54 (06) : 1320 - 1330
  • [26] Seed quality and New Zealand's native plants: an unexplored relationship?
    Hampton, JG
    Hill, MJ
    NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 2002, 40 (03) : 357 - 364
  • [27] Seed dispersal effectiveness increases with body size in New Zealand alpine scree weta (Deinacrida connectens)
    Larsen, Hannah
    Burns, Kevin C.
    AUSTRAL ECOLOGY, 2012, 37 (07) : 800 - 806
  • [28] Current rates of fruit removal and seed dispersal in New Zealand fleshy-fruited mountain plants
    Young, Laura M.
    Kelly, Dave
    NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2014, 38 (02): : 288 - 296
  • [29] Aquatic seed dispersal and its implications in Cirsium vinaceum, a threatened endemic thistle of New Mexico
    Craddock, CL
    Huenneke, LF
    AMERICAN MIDLAND NATURALIST, 1997, 138 (01): : 215 - 219
  • [30] A century of weed change in New Zealand's forage seed multiplication industry
    Rubenstein, Jesse M.
    Hulme, Philip E.
    Rolston, M. Philip
    V. Stewart, Alan
    Hampton, John G.
    NEOBIOTA, 2023, 85 : 167 - 195