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Title: Lindsay Wieland


1
Seed Dispersal Estimating Dispersal Kernels and
Seed Shadows
  • Lindsay Wieland
  • November 10, 2009

2
Outline
  • Seed Dispersal
  • Fruits and Frugivores
  • Seed Shadow v. Dispersal Kernel
  • Estimating Dispersal Kernels
  • Conceptual Model
  • Elaeocarpus grandis Case Study
  • Toucan-generated Dispersal Model
  • Spatially Explicit Model

3
Introduction
  • In tropical forests, seed dispersal processes are
    dominated by vertebrate dispersers and can
    directly involve individuals belonging to
    hundreds of species
  • Dispersal and resultant seed shadows may
    influence key processes, such as colonization,
    population persistence and community structure

4
Dispersal Types
  • Gravity (Gravichory)
  • Wind (Anemochory)
  • Water (Hydrochory)
  • Ballistic (Autochory)
  • Animal (Zoochory)
  • Epizoochory (transported externally)
  • Inadvertent (cached)
  • Myrmechory (ant-dispersed)
  • Endozoochory (through the digestive tract)

5
Fruits
  • Nutritive fleshy arils,
  • pericarp or pulp
  • Chemical attractant
  • Colors
  • Fruit size varies from 0.01g to 40g
  • In Neotropical forests, 50 - 90 of the canopy
    trees bear fruits adapted for animal dispersal,
    while close to 100 of the shrubs and sub-canopy
    trees produce fleshy fruits
  • In Paleotropical forests 35 40 canopy trees
    bear fruits and 70-80 of shrubs

6
Frugivores
  • High variety of tropical bird, bat, ant, mammal
    dispersers
  • Frugivore size ranges from 10g tyrannid
    flycatchers to African Elephant
  • Enormous differences in fruit and frugivore
    scales imply an enormous potential range of
    phenomena

7
Seed Shadow v. Dispersal Kernel
  • Seed shadow the spatial distribution of seeds
    dispersed from a single plant
  • Dispersal kernel frequency distribution of the
    dispersal distance within a crop or an entire
    population

8
Frugivores
  • Movement and behavior directly impacts seed
    shadows/kernels
  • Frugivores that remain for long periods in
    fruiting tree will drop most seeds beneath parent
    tree, whereas short-term visitors to fruiting
    trees will disperse most seeds at sites away from
    parent tree
  • Results in spatial variability in
  • seed shadows, which can have
  • consequences for seed and
  • seedling survival and population
  • demographics

9
Outline
  • Dispersal types
  • Fruits and Frugivores
  • Seed Shadow v. Dispersal Kernel
  • Estimating Dispersal Kernels
  • Conceptual Model
  • Elaeocarpus grandis Case Study
  • Toucan-generated Dispersal Model
  • Spatially Explicit Model

10
Estimating Dispersal Kernels
  • Elaeocarpus grandis (Elaeocarpaceae)
  • Rainforest canopy tree
  • Medium(25.6mm diameter)blue fruits
  • 3-5 seeds per fruit
  • Highly sculpted, thick, bony endocarp
  • Native to Australia

11
Conceptual Model
12
Functional Groups
13
Functional Groups
  • Incorporates ecological redundancy by treating
    species that provide similar services as a single
    class
  • To define disperser functional groups
  • Measure quantity of fruit handled
  • Measure quality of fruit handling
  • Quantify diversity of species handled

14
Case Study Elaeocarpus grandis
  • Functional Groups
  • 65 vertebrate dispersers grouped into 15
    functional classes
  • Wide-ranging slow-gut
  • Wide-ranging rapid-gut
  • Wide-ranging large fruit
  • Terrestrial within-forest
  • Mega-terrestrial
  • Predatory Rodents
  • Large within-forest
  • Small within-forest
  • Etc

15
Spatial and Temporal Variation
16
Spatial and Temporal Variation
  • Generalization for patterns of seed dispersal is
    not simple and cannot be done in short-term
    studies in particular locations
  • Variability in
  • Disperser distribution and abundance
  • Climatic variation across years and locations
  • Spatial variation in biotic and abiotic
    conditions
  • Size and timing of fruit crops
  • Animal behavior and movement

17
Case Study Elaeocarpus grandis
  • Pied currawongs (Strepera graculina) exhibit
    greater displacement rates in fragmented
    landscapes than in continuous forest

Strepera graculina
  • Complete sampling under each treatment
    condition
  • Kernel estimates for fragments and continuous
    forest separately

Dennis Westcott 2007
18
Relative Contributions to Dispersal
19
Relative Contributions to Dispersal
  • Sampling strategy must account for these
    different contributions
  • Observation of trees (day and night)
  • Measure removal rates of fruits and seeds placed
    on forest floor
  • Measure fruit production in canopy and fruit
    fallen to ground
  • Which dispersers are relevant to which plants?
  • What proportion of crop is removed by different
    vectors?
  • What is the manner in which seeds are handled?

20
Case Study Elaeocarpus grandis
  • Which dispersers are relevant to which plants?
  • Large E. grandis fruits imply large-bodied
    dispersers

21
Case Study Elaeocarpus grandis
  • What proportion of crop is removed by different
    vectors?
  • High proportion of E. grandis dispersed by volant
    dispersers

22
Case Study Elaeocarpus grandis
  • What is the manner in which seeds are handled?
  • Some cached seeds, only 2 survival for seeds
    handled by rodents

23
Seed Retention Time
24
Seed Retention Time
  • Estimate retention time for swallowing and
    defecation/regurgitation by wild animals in
    captivity

25
Case Study Elaeocarpus grandis
  • 10 disperser functional groups (that consume E.
    grandis)
  • 17 species of fruit (in same functional group as
    E. grandis)
  • 1707 medium-sized few-seeded fruits passed
    through 90 feeding trials
  • Range of retention time 1min-28hrs
  • Effects of gut passage time on germinability
    varies widely

26
Disperser Movement Patterns
27
Disperser Movement Patterns
  • Direct observation or telemetry
  • Mark-recapture omits short-term patterns of
    individual movement between captures

Dennis Westcott 2007
28
Case Study Elaeocarpus grandis
  • Used continuous radio-telemetry to triangulate
    location at 5 min intervals
  • No attempt to approach or sight the animal to
    minimize observer effects

Dennis Westcott 2007
29
Estimating Dispersal Kernel for a Disperser
30
Case Study Elaeocarpus grandis
  • Seed Retention Time Disperser Movement Patterns

Dennis Westcott 2007
31
Estimating Total Dispersal Kernels
32
Total Dispersal Kernels
  • Incorporates contribution of all dispersers
    relevant to focal plant individual, species or
    functional type
  • Scale the y-axis of each disperser kernel
    relative to other dispersers according to
    proportion of total crop removed
  • Case Study Elaeocarpus grandis
  • 77 of seeds dispersed lt100m
  • 3 dispersed beyond 400m

33
Case Study Elaeocarpus grandis

34
Case Study Elaeocarpus grandis
  • Some functional groups dominate close dispersal,
    others dominate long-distance dispersal, or
    contribute across the entire range
  • Functional groups differ in contribution of crop
    removal
  • Large bodied species and
  • abundant species provide
  • greatest proportion of dispersal

35
Post-primary Dispersal Processes
36
Post-primary Dispersal Processes
  • Secondary dispersal
  • Seed predation
  • Mortality
  • Mortality Kernel relationship between dispersal
    distance and mortality
  • Recruitment Kernel Total Dispersal Kernel -
    Mortality Kernel

37
Predicted Recruitment Kernel
38
Outline
  • Dispersal types
  • Fruits and Frugivores
  • Seed Shadow v. Dispersal Kernel
  • Estimating Dispersal Kernels
  • Conceptual Model
  • Elaeocarpus grandis Case Study
  • Toucan-generated Dispersal Model
  • Spatially Explicit Model

39
Using Toucan-generated Dispersal Models to
Estimate Seed Dispersal in Amazonian Ecuador
  • Estimate seed dispersal distances for a
    Neotropical tree, Virola flexuosa
    (Myristicaceae), based solely on toucan movements
    and seed retention times
  • Present a spatially explicit model, which
    realistically outlines the dispersion patterns
    generated by toucans

Ramphastos tucanus
40
Study Site and Species
  • Yasuní Biosphere Reserve, Ecuador
  • Terra firme, lowland rainforest,
  • gt3000mm rain per year
  • V. flexuosa is a dioecious, shade-intolerant
  • species widespread in South America
  • Toucans (Ramphastidae) are important seed
    dispersers throughout the Neotropics
  • Many-banded Araçari (Pteroglossus pluricinctus)
  • White-throated Toucan (Ramphastos tucanus)
  • Channel-billed Toucan (R. vitellinus)
  • Differ in size, diet, movement patterns, and seed
    dispersal ecology

R. vitellinus
41
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42
Estimating Seed Shadows Field Methods
  • Fruit Removal
  • Tree watches during fruiting season (0600
    -1000, 8 reps/tree)
  • Crop Size
  • Seed traps under focal trees (5 crown area)
  • Seed Retention
  • Wild toucans- marked V. flexuosa seeds with
    thread, placed in papaya and bird gel, continuous
    observation (0600-1800)
  • St. Louis Zoo - V. flexuosa seeds placed in
    papaya and grapes, continuous observation
    (0800-1700)
  • Movement Patterns
  • Radio-tracking (2001-2005), 15 min intervals
  • Several tracking days to follow individuals for
    detailed movement and location data

43
Results Fruit Removal and Seed Retention
  • 400 observation hours, 13 individual fruiting
    trees
  • Toucans represent 64.3 of visits and remove gt52
    dispersed seeds from V. flexuosa
    (Pteroglossus12.2, Ramphastos 39.8)
  • Average seed retention time 30min
  • Most seeds (95) were regurgitated
  • Pteroglossus Ramphastos

44
Results Movement Patterns
  • Radio-tracked individuals 3-25 days
  • Distance traveled per movement bout ranged from 0
    to gt2000m
  • Time between observations vary (15min-165min due
    to signal loss)
  • Average movement distance in 30min
  • Pteroglossus 528m
  • Ramphastos 348m
  • Proportion of movements lt100m
  • Pteroglossus16
  • Ramphastos 28
  • Home range estimates
  • Pteroglossus191ha
  • Ramphastos 86ha

Pteroglossus
Ramphastos
45
Results Dispersal Models
  • Pteroglossus 84 of seeds
  • Ramphastos 72 of seeds
  • Both dispersal kernels have long tails
  • Pteroglossus Ramphastos

gt100m from parent
46
Using Toucan-generated Dispersal Models to
Estimate Seed Dispersal in Amazonian Ecuador
  • Estimate seed dispersal distances for a
    Neotropical tree, Virola flexuosa
    (Myristicaceae), based solely on toucan movements
    and seed retention times
  • Present a spatially explicit model, which
    realistically outlines the dispersion patterns
    generated by toucans

Ramphastos tucanus
47
Estimating Seed Shadows Probability of Seed
Deposition
  • Following Murray (1988) and Holbrook Smith
    (2000), estimated toucan-generated dispersal
    kernel using seed retention times and movement
    data
  • pd (adt bt) where
  • Pprobability of a seed being deposited at a
    particular distance category (d) from the parent
    tree,
  • a probability of a bird being within a
    particular distance category (d) in time interval
    (t)
  • b probability of a seed being passed in that
    time interval (t)

48
Estimating Seed Shadows Spatially Explicit
Models
  • Probabilities of seed deposition (P) for each
    toucan species were combined with V. flexuosa
    fruit removal data to more realistically estimate
    seed shadow
  • Nx (pxm rm) where
  • N number of seeds predicted to fall at a
    particular location (x)
  • p probability of seed deposition at varying
    distances (x) from each female tree (m)
  • r number of fruit removed at each female tree

49
Results Dispersal Models
  • Significant differences between distributions are
    result of movement patterns
  • (Cramér-von Mises ?2.461, P0.001)
  • Higher density seed-fall in South- East where
    more fecund trees located
  • V. flexuosa produce fruit every 2-3 years,
    therefore spatial depiction is restricted to the
    time period of this study (2001-2005)

Pteroglossus
Ramphastos
50
Effectiveness of Toucan Dispersal
  • Very effective dispersers at Tiputini and may
    help decrease density-dependent seed/seedling
    mortality by transporting seeds away from parent
    plant
  • What is an effective dispersal distance?
  • Howe et al. (1985) found 44-fold increase in seed
    survival when moved gt45m from parent Virola tree
  • Holbrook Loiselle (2007) found greater numbers
    of larger seedlings beyond 40m suggesting
    differential seedling survival
  • Long distance dispersal
  • Toucans can fly up to 3665m (Pteroglossus maximum
    distance)
  • Facilitate gene flow, colonization of new sites,
    and forest regeneration
  • Reduces kin competition

51
Shape and Scale of Dispersal
  • Patterns of behavior (movement, seed retention,
    foraging behavior) and plant parameters (crop
    size) can significantly impact the shape and
    scale of dispersal kernels and patchy nature of
    seed shadows
  • Seed dispersal studies require integrating
    processes across a wide range of scales
  • 84-ha may not encompass movement patterns of all
    Virola dispersers
  • Does not cover entire home range of Pteroglossus
  • Does not incorporate seed rain from trees outside
    the 84ha area

52
Conclusions
  • Many factors interact to determine the density
    and dispersion patterns of plant populations.
    Seed dispersal is only the first step in the
    process.
  • Due to great diversity of animal dispersers in
    tropical forests, understanding and predicting
    seed dispersal patterns can be difficult
  • Dispersal and resultant seed shadows may
    influence key processes, such as colonization,
    population persistence and community structure

53
Works Cited
  • Clark, C.J. , J.R. Poulsen and V.T.Parker. 2001.
    The role of arboreal seed dispersal groups on the
    seed rain of a lowland tropical forest.
    Biotropica 33 606-620.
  • Dennis, A. J., and D. A.Westcott. 2007.
    Estimating Dispersal Kernels Produced by a
    Diverse Community of Vertebrates. Pp. 201-228 in
    A. J. Dennis, E. W. Schupp, R. Green, and D. W.
    Westcott, editors, Seed Dispersal Theory and its
    Applications in a Changing World. CABI
    Publishing, Wallingford, Oxfordshire, UK. 
  • Fleming, T.H., R. Breitwisch and G.H. Whitesides.
    1987. Patterns of Tropical Vertebrate Frugivore
    Diversity. Ann. Rev. Ecol. Syst. 18 91-109.
  • Holbrook, K. M., and B. A. Loiselle. 2007. Using
    toucan-generated seed shadows to estimate seed
    dispersal in Amazonia Ecuador. Pp. 300-321 in A.
    J. Dennis, E. W. Schupp, R. Green, and D. W.
    Westcott, editors, Seed Dispersal Theory and its
    Applications in a Changing World. CABI
    Publishing, Wallingford, Oxfordshire, UK.
  • Howe, H.F. and J. Smallwood. 1982. Ecology of
    seed dispersal. Ann. Rev. Ecol. Syst. 1 3
    201-28.
  • Nathan, R. and H. C. Muller-Landau. 2000.
    Spatial patterns of seed dispersal, their
    determinants and consequences for recruitment.
    Trends in Ecology and Evolution 15278-285.
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