| Literature DB >> 28794422 |
Laurence Culot1,2, Carolina Bello3, João Luis Ferreira Batista4, Hilton Thadeu Zarate do Couto4, Mauro Galetti3.
Abstract
The extinction of large frugivores has consequences for the recruitment of large-seeded plants with potential lasting effects on carbon storage in tropical rainforests. However, previous studies relating frugivore defaunation to changes in carbon storage ignore potential compensation by redundant frugivores and the effects of seed predators on plant recruitment. Based on empirical data of the recruitment success of a large-seeded hardwood tree species (Cryptocarya mandioccana, Lauraceae) across a defaunation gradient of seed dispersers and predators, we show that defaunation increases both seed dispersal limitation and seed predation. Depending on the level of seed predator loss, plant recruitment is reduced by 70.7-94.9% as a result of the loss of seed dispersers. The loss of large seed predators increases the net seed mortality by 7-30% due to the increased abundance of small granivorous rodents. The loss of large seed dispersers can be buffered by the compensatory effects of smaller frugivores in seed removal, but it is not sufficient to prevent a decrease in plant recruitment. We show that the conservation of both seed predators and dispersers is necessary for the recruitment of large-seeded plants. Since these plants contribute substantially to carbon stocks, defaunation can jeopardize the maintenance of tropical forest carbon storage.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28794422 PMCID: PMC5550475 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-08222-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Seed disperser and predator assemblages in the intact (Carlos Botelho, highlands – CB-High), moderately defaunated (Ilha do Cardoso – IC), and defaunated areas (Carlos Botelho, lowlands – CB-Low).
| Functional group | Species | Common names | Mass (kg) | CB - High (Non-def) | IC (Mod def) | CB - Low (Def) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Seed dispersers |
| Tapir | 220 | com | ex | fe |
|
| Muriqui | 12 | com | fe | ||
|
| Howler monkey | 8 | com | com | fe | |
|
| Jacutinga | 1.2 | com | com | com | |
| Seed predators |
| White-lipped peccary | 35 | fe | com | low |
|
| Collared peccary | 15 | com | com | com | |
|
| Spotted Paca | 5 | com | com | com | |
|
| Red-rumped Agouti | 3 | low | com | com | |
|
| Ihering´s Spiny Rat | 0.4 | com | com | com | |
|
| Russet Rice Rat | 0.2 | com | com | com | |
|
| Lesser Wilfred’s Mouse | 0.02 | com | com | ||
|
| Paraguayan rice rat | 0.02 | com | com | ||
|
| Blackish Grass Mouse | 0.01 | com | com | ||
|
| Black-footed Pygmy Rice Rat | 0.01 | com | com | com | |
|
| Montane Grass Mouse | 0.01 | com | com |
‘com’ indicates that the species is common in the area, “low” that it occurs in low density, “fe” that the species is functionally extinct, and “ex” that the species is extinct.
Figure 1Components of seed dispersal effectiveness of the three main dispersers of C. mandioccana. (a) Percentage of seeds swallowed by muriquis, howler monkeys, and jacutingas, as well as the percentage of spat out seeds (all frugivore combined) in the three study sites characterized by different seed disperser communities: Non defaunated (muriquis, howler monkeys, and jacutingas), Moderate (howler monkeys and jacutingas), and Defaunated (jacutingas). Data are based on focal observations of C. mandioccana fruiting trees in 2011–2012 (Non-defaunated: N = 172 h; Moderate: N = 108 h, and Defaunated: N = 153 h). (b) Germination success of seeds defecated by muriquis, howler monkeys, and jacutingas, compared to seeds without pulp and seeds with pulp along the defaunation gradient. Bars represent the mean number of germinated seeds out of five seeds (ten replicates) and vertical lines represent standard deviation. (c) Seed dispersal distances to C. mandioccana conspecifics by muriquis (N = 173), howler monkeys (N = 127), and jacutingas (N = 168). Frequency distributions of seed dispersal distances (5 m-bins) where red vertical bars represent each observed dispersal event and the blue and grey lines, a non-parametric smoothing spline fit to the empirical distance distributions together with bootstrapped estimates. (Illustrations of: muriqui and howler monkey - Copyright Stephen D. Nash; jacutinga – Copyright Fabio Martins Labecca, authorized by the authors).
Figure 2Expected recruitment success of C. mandioccana with and without compensation effect of the disperser community. The loss of seed dispersers was simulated in the area where the complete assemblage of seed dispersers is currently present (Carlos Botelho State Park, highlands) and the recruitment success of C. mandioccana estimated in three scenarios of seed predator communities. The simulations give the expected recruitment success in different scenarios of seed disperser (x axis) and seed predator (y axis) communities considering (dark grey circles) or not (light grey circles) compensation effects of the disperser community. The contribution of the disperser community in the compensation scenario is based on the data collected in Cardoso Island (community without muriquis) and in the lowland part of Carlos Botelho State Park (community without muriquis and howler monkeys). (Illustrations of: muriqui and howler monkey - Copyright Stephen D. Nash; peccary, agouti, and rodent – Copyright Fiona A. Reid; jacutinga – Copyright Fabio Martins Labecca, authorized by the authors).