The evolutionary ecology of nut dispersal

被引:0
|
作者
Stephen B. Vander Wall
机构
[1] University of Nevada,Department of Biology Ecology, Evolution, and Conservation Biology Program
来源
The Botanical Review | 2001年 / 67卷
关键词
Tannin; Botanical Review; Corvid; Gray Squirrel; Black Walnut;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
A variety of nut-producing plants have mutualistic seed-dispersal interactions with animals (rodents and corvids) that scatter hoard their nuts in the soil. The goals of this review are to summarize the widespread horticultural, botanical, and ecological literature pertaining to nut dispersal inJuglans, Carya, Quercus, Fagus, Castanae, Castanopsis, Lithocarpus, Corylus, Aesculus, andPrunus; to examine the evolutionary histories of these mutualistic interactions; and to identify the traits of nut-bearing plants and nut-dispersing rodents and jays that influence the success of the mutualism. These interactions appear to have originated as early as the Paleocene, about 60 million years ago. Most nuts appear to have evolved from ancestors with wind-dispersed seeds, but the ancestral form of dispersal in almonds (Prunus spp.) was by frugivorous animals that ingested fruit.
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页码:74 / 117
页数:43
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