Literature DB >> 28317110

Atlantic frugivory: a plant-frugivore interaction data set for the Atlantic Forest.

Carolina Bello1,2, Mauro Galetti1,3, Denise Montan1, Marco A Pizo4, Tatiane C Mariguela1, Laurence Culot4, Felipe Bufalo4, Fabio Labecca1, Felipe Pedrosa1, Rafaela Constantini1, Carine Emer1, Wesley R Silva5, Fernanda R da Silva6, Otso Ovaskainen2,7, Pedro Jordano8.   

Abstract

The data set provided here includes 8,320 frugivory interactions (records of pairwise interactions between plant and frugivore species) reported for the Atlantic Forest. The data set includes interactions between 331 vertebrate species (232 birds, 90 mammals, 5 fishes, 1 amphibian, and 3 reptiles) and 788 plant species. We also present information on traits directly related to the frugivory process (endozoochory), such as the size of fruits and seeds and the body mass and gape size of frugivores. Data were extracted from 166 published and unpublished sources spanning from 1961 to 2016. While this is probably the most comprehensive data set available for a tropical ecosystem, it is arguably taxonomically and geographically biased. The plant families better represented are Melastomataceae, Myrtaceae, Moraceae, Urticaceae, and Solanaceae. Myrsine coriacea, Alchornea glandulosa, Cecropia pachystachya, and Trema micrantha are the plant species with the most animal dispersers (83, 76, 76, and 74 species, respectively). Among the animal taxa, the highest number of interactions is reported for birds (3,883) followed by mammals (1,315). The woolly spider monkey or muriqui, Brachyteles arachnoides, and Rufous-bellied Thrush, Turdus rufiventris, are the frugivores with the most diverse fruit diets (137 and 121 plants species, respectively). The most important general patterns that we note are that larger seeded plant species (>12 mm) are mainly eaten by terrestrial mammals (rodents, ungulates, primates, and carnivores) and that birds are the main consumers of fruits with a high concentration of lipids. Our data set is geographically biased, with most interactions recorded for the southeast Atlantic Forest.
© 2017 by the Ecological Society of America.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Atlantic Forest; frugivores; frugivory; fruit traits; mutualism; network; plant-animal interaction; seed dispersal

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28317110     DOI: 10.1002/ecy.1818

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecology        ISSN: 0012-9658            Impact factor:   5.499


  10 in total

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4.  Defaunation precipitates the extinction of evolutionarily distinct interactions in the Anthropocene.

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5.  The erosion of biodiversity and biomass in the Atlantic Forest biodiversity hotspot.

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Review 9.  Internal and External Dispersal of Plants by Animals: An Aquatic Perspective on Alien Interference.

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  10 in total

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