Assisting seed dispersers to restore oldfields: An individual-based model of the interactions among badgers, foxes and Iberian pear trees
Authored by Volker Grimm, Thorsten Wiegand, Daniel Ayllon, Jose M Fedriani, Francisco Palomares, Alberto Suarez-Esteban
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2664.13000
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Model Code URLs:
https://figshare.com/articles/DisPear_model_code_implemented_in_NetLogo/5280862/1
Abstract
1. Increasing land abandonment in many areas of the world presents an
opportunity for ecosystem recovery, which is often driven by seed
dispersal by vertebrate frugivores. However, we are far from
understanding the most effective way of using common management actions
(i.e. planting fruiting trees) to stimulate animal seed dispersal and
thus the restoration of human-altered abandoned habitats.
2. To investigate how to stimulate animal seed dispersal, we combined
long-term field data with individual-based, spatially explicit
simulation models. We used our approach to assess the effectiveness of
contrasting Iberian pear Pyrus bourgaeana planting strategies in
enhancing restoration of abandoned lands through seed dispersal by red
foxes Vulpes vulpes and Eurasian badgers Meles meles in the Donana World
Biosphere Reserve (South West Spain).
3. Our simulation results indicate that planting trees in an aggregated
fashion is less efficient in terms of seed arrival than planting them
regularly or randomly. For aggregated planted trees, the increase in the
area of the oldfield that received seeds was only 7\%-9\% compared to
the baseline scenario of no intervention, whereas for regularly
distributed planted trees the increment was up to 40\%.
4. Doubling the number of planted P. bourgaeana trees appeared
cost-effective for regular and random tree distributions, but not for
the aggregated one. For example, while doubling the number of trees
planted regularly leads up to 12\% increase in the number of seeds
arriving into the oldfield, no increment on the number of -arrived seeds
was detected when trees were planted aggregately.
5. Synthesis and applications. Choosing the spatial distribution and
density of planted trees in abandoned lands depends on a number of
ecological and socio-economical factors. Given our results, the strong
seed dispersal limitation of the target tree population and that our
study site was fully protected for conservation, planting Pyrus
bourgaeana trees regularly appeared to be the most efficient strategy to
enhance seed arrival into the target oldfield. Combining long-term field
data with individual-based, spatially explicit simulation models have
the potential to guide local restoration efforts in diverse
human-altered habitats and thus bridge the -existing gap between basic
and applied research on animal seed dispersal.
Tags
Agent-based modelling
Landscape
ecological restoration
Conservation
pattern
Recruitment
Forest
Restoration
Plant interactions
Abandoned lands
Dispersal kernel
Donana
national park
Endozoochory
Frugivory
Oldfields
Seed
dispersal limitation
Tree planting
Agricultural land
Natural-park
Rain