نتایج جستجو برای: seed dispersal

تعداد نتایج: 93788  

2009
Mariano A. Rodriguez-Cabal Katharine L. Stuble Martin A. Nuñez Nathan J. Sanders

Although it is increasingly clear that exotic invasive species affect seed-dispersal mutualisms, a synthetic examination of the effect of exotic invasive species on seed-dispersal mutualisms is lacking. Here, we review the impacts of the invasive Argentine ant (Linepithema humile) on seed dispersal. We found that sites with L. humile had 92 per cent fewer native ant seed dispersers than did sit...

Journal: :AoB PLANTS 2015
E M Wandrag A E Dunham R H Miller H S Rogers

The accumulation of seeds in the soil (the seedbank) can set the template for the early regeneration of habitats following disturbance. Seed dispersal is an important factor determining the pattern of seed rain, which affects the interactions those seeds experience. For this reason, seed dispersal should play an important role in structuring forest seedbanks, yet we know little about how that h...

2017
Eckhard W Heymann Laurence Culot Christoph Knogge Tony Enrique Noriega Piña Emérita R Tirado Herrera Matthias Klapproth Dietmar Zinner

Seed dispersal is a key ecological process in tropical forests, with effects on various levels ranging from plant reproductive success to the carbon storage potential of tropical rainforests. On a local and landscape scale, spatial patterns of seed dispersal create the template for the recruitment process and thus influence the population dynamics of plant species. The strength of this influenc...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2011
Johanna Lenz Wolfgang Fiedler Tanja Caprano Wolfgang Friedrichs Bernhard H Gaese Martin Wikelski Katrin Böhning-Gaese

Frugivorous birds provide important ecosystem services by transporting seeds of fleshy fruited plants. It has been assumed that seed-dispersal kernels generated by these animals are generally leptokurtic, resulting in little dispersal among habitat fragments. However, little is known about the seed-dispersal distribution generated by large frugivorous birds in fragmented landscapes. We investig...

Journal: :American journal of primatology 1998
M A Norconk B W Grafton N L Conklin-Brittain

From a plant's perspective, the difference between a seed predator and a seed disperser should be straightforward: attract animals that will disperse seeds and defend seeds from potential predators. Unlike pulp-eating frugivores, seed predators regularly encounter diverse plant protective mechanisms. The purpose of this paper is to examine feeding constraints, morphological adaptations, and the...

Journal: :American journal of primatology 2014
Onja H Razafindratsima Thomas A Jones Amy E Dunham

We combined data on gut-passage times, feeding, and movement to explore the patterns of seed dispersal by Eulemur rubriventer, Eulemur rufrifrons, and Varecia variegata editorum lemurs in Ranomafana National Park, Madagascar. These lemur species deposited less than half of their consumed seeds >100 m away from conspecific trees (40-50%). Long-distance dispersal (>500 m) was rare and average dis...

2007
A. M. SIEPIELSKI C. W. BENKMAN

1. Previous studies have demonstrated that wind dispersal is an effective mode of seed dispersal for pines ( Pinus , Pinaceae) with seeds weighing <90 mg, but not for largerseeded ( ≥ 90 mg) pines. Consequently, most large-seeded pines rely on birds in the family Corvidae for seed dispersal, but some do not, and most of their seeds fall near the parent tree. Why seeds of these pines are not dis...

Journal: :Global change biology 2013
Sally E Thompson Gabriel G Katul

Migration of plant populations is a potential survival response to climate change that depends critically on seed dispersal. Biological and physical factors determine dispersal and migration of wind-dispersed species. Recent field and wind tunnel studies demonstrate biological adaptations that bias seed release toward conditions of higher wind velocity, promoting longer dispersal distances and ...

2012
Xavier Arnan Roberto Molowny-Horas Anselm Rodrigo Javier Retana

Secondary seed dispersal is an important plant-animal interaction, which is central to understanding plant population and community dynamics. Very little information is still available on the effects of dispersal on plant demography and, particularly, for ant-seed dispersal interactions. As many other interactions, seed dispersal by animals involves costs (seed predation) and benefits (seed dis...

Journal: :Conservation biology : the journal of the Society for Conservation Biology 2012
Julia S Markl Matthias Schleuning Pierre Michel Forget Pedro Jordano Joanna E Lambert Anna Traveset S Joseph Wright Katrin Böhning-Gaese

Animal-mediated seed dispersal is important for sustaining biological diversity in forest ecosystems, particularly in the tropics. Forest fragmentation, hunting, and selective logging modify forests in myriad ways and their effects on animal-mediated seed dispersal have been examined in many case studies. However, the overall effects of different types of human disturbance on animal-mediated se...

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