Fruit removal, pyrene dispersal, post-dispersal predation and seedling establishment of a bird-dispersed tree

被引:0
|
作者
José Ramón Obeso
Ignacio C. Fernández-Calvo
机构
[1] Universidad de Oviedo,Dpto Biología Organismos y Sistemas, Unidad de Ecología
来源
Plant Ecology | 2003年 / 165卷
关键词
Aquifoliaceae; Fleshy fruits; Germination; Litter effect; Microhabitat; Recruitment; Rodent predation;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The recruitment of a dioecious bird-dispersed tree, the hollyIlex aquifolium (Aquifoliaceae), was studied consideringthe stages of fruit removal by birds, seed rain, post-dispersal seed predation,seed germination and seedling survival. The main objective was to test theeffect of different microhabitats within a beech forest on recruitment stages.Migrant thrushes were the main dispersers of this tree whose fruit crops wereentirely removed during two study years. Seed rain was greatest beneath hollytrees regardless of their sex and lowest in the open sites. Post-dispersal seedpredation was examined by two experiments and did not differ betweenmicrohabitats despite its quantitative importance (about 70%). Seedlingemergence, which probably corresponded to seeds from several cohorts, wasgreater beneath trees than in open sites and the density of second-yr to 5cm seedlings depended on the presence-absence of ungulateherbivores and litter. While the former had a detrimental effect, the latterhada beneficial effect on seedling abundance. Seedling survival showed nosignificant variations between microhabitats but depended on seedling densityinsome microhabitats (holly, beech). Finally, the initial seed arrival seemed todetermine microhabitat suitability for holly seedling establishment. However,under heavy browsing the density of seedlings may be strongly reduced leadingtomicrohabitat homogeneity for holly seedling establishment.
引用
收藏
页码:223 / 233
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Fruit removal, pyrene dispersal, post-dispersal predation and seedling establishment of a bird-dispersed tree
    Obeso, JR
    Fernández-Calvo, IC
    PLANT ECOLOGY, 2003, 165 (02) : 223 - 233
  • [2] Gut passage and secondary metabolites alter the source of post-dispersal predation for bird-dispersed chili seeds
    Fricke, Evan C.
    Haak, David C.
    Levey, Douglas J.
    Tewksbury, Joshua J.
    OECOLOGIA, 2016, 181 (03) : 905 - 910
  • [3] Gut passage and secondary metabolites alter the source of post-dispersal predation for bird-dispersed chili seeds
    Evan C. Fricke
    David C. Haak
    Douglas J. Levey
    Joshua J. Tewksbury
    Oecologia, 2016, 181 : 905 - 910
  • [4] Post-dispersal seed predation and the establishment of vertebrate dispersed plants in Mediterranean scrublands
    Hulme, PE
    OECOLOGIA, 1997, 111 (01) : 91 - 98
  • [5] Post-dispersal seed predation and the establishment of vertebrate dispersed plants in Mediterranean scrublands
    Philip E. Hulme
    Oecologia, 1997, 111 : 91 - 98
  • [6] Post-dispersal seed predation in Pinus halepensis and consequences on seedling establishment after fire
    Jose Broncano, Maria
    Rodrigo, Anselm
    Retana, Javier
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE, 2008, 17 (03) : 407 - 414
  • [7] Seed transfer among bird-dispersed trees and its consequences for post-dispersal seed fate
    Garcia, Daniel
    Martinez, Isabel
    Obeso, Jose Ramon
    BASIC AND APPLIED ECOLOGY, 2007, 8 (06) : 533 - 543
  • [8] Role of post-dispersal seed and seedling predation in establishment of dandelion (Taraxacum agg.) plants
    Honek, Alois
    Martinkova, Zdenka
    Saska, Pavel
    Koprdova, Stanislava
    AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT, 2009, 134 (1-2) : 126 - 135
  • [9] EVOLUTION OF SEED SIZE IN THE BIRD-DISPERSED TREE SANTALUM-ALBUM L - A TRADE OFF BETWEEN SEEDLING ESTABLISHMENT AND DISPERSAL EFFICIENCY
    HEGDE, SG
    SHAANKER, RU
    GANESHAIAH, KN
    EVOLUTIONARY TRENDS IN PLANTS, 1991, 5 (02): : 131 - 135
  • [10] Spatial variation in ant and rodent post-dispersal predation of vertebrate-dispersed seeds
    Rey, PJ
    Garrido, JL
    Alcántara, JM
    Ramírez, JM
    Aguilera, A
    García, L
    Manzaneda, AJ
    Fernández, R
    FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, 2002, 16 (06) : 773 - 781