Inequalities in fruit-removal and seed dispersal: consequences of bird behaviour, neighbourhood density and landscape aggregation
Authored by Juan M Morales, Tomas A Carlo
Date Published: 2008
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2745.2008.01379.x
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
1. Frugivores disperse the seeds of the majority of woody plant species
world-wide. Thus, insights on how frugivores influence the dispersal of
plants and the variability of this process are crucial for understanding
plant population dynamics in a rapidly changing world.
2. We used a spatially explicit, stochastic, individual-based model that
simulates fruit-removal and seed dispersal by birds to assess bird
density, landscape and neighbourhood effects on the inequalities of
within-population fruit-removal rates and seed dispersal. We also
compared model predictions with spatially-explicit field data.
3. In our simulations, bird density had a strong effect on the
distribution of fruit-removal rates creating large inequalities among
plants. Also, for equal bird densities, inequalities increased with the
landscape level aggregation of plants.
4. Fruit removal increased with increasing plant neighbourhood density
although there was a tendency to decline at the highest densities.
Neighbourhood density also changed average dispersal distances, but with
shorter distances at higher densities. Plants with few neighbours not
only had longer distance dispersal but also a larger variance in seed
rain across distances than plants with ten or more neighbours. These
relationships between neighbourhood density and fruit removal and
dispersal distance were scale-dependent with a peak in correlations at
150-m radius.
5. Similar to model predictions, field data shows an inverse
relationship between dispersal distances (inferred from bird movements)
and fruiting neighbourhood density. Also, fruit-removal rates observed
in the field show large numbers of plants receiving little or zero
fruit-removal. Fruit-removal rate distributions were statistically
indistinguishable between the simulation and field data. But, distributions were strikingly different from two alternative models that
lacked spatial effects.
6. Synthesis. Our model and field data show that as fruiting plants
become aggregated, inequalities in fruit-removal rates increase and seed
dispersal distance decreases. Both of these processes could help create
and maintain plant aggregation and affect genetic structuring. The model
also predicts that small-scale neighbourhood effects can be controlled
by large-scale processes such as overall frugivore abundance and
landscape-level plant aggregation. Most importantly, both simulations
and field data shows an interaction between plant spatial pattern and
bird foraging, which results in neighbourhood-specific dispersal and
rates of fruit removal.
Tags
models
patterns
Recruitment
frugivore
Plant
Distance
Trees
Tropical forest
Mistletoe seeds
Prunus-mahaleb