| Literature DB >> 30895154 |
Clare Aslan1, Noelle G Beckman2, Haldre S Rogers3, Judie Bronstein4, Damaris Zurell5, Florian Hartig6, Katriona Shea7, Liba Pejchar8, Mike Neubert9, John Poulsen10, Janneke HilleRisLambers11, Maria Miriti12, Bette Loiselle13, Edu Effiom14, Jenny Zambrano15, Geno Schupp2, Gesine Pufal16, Jeremy Johnson17, James M Bullock18, Jedediah Brodie19, Emilio Bruna13, Robert Stephen Cantrell20, Robin Decker21, Evan Fricke3, Katie Gurski22, Alan Hastings21, Oleg Kogan23, Onja Razafindratsima24, Manette Sandor25, Sebastian Schreiber21, Rebecca Snell26, Christopher Strickland27, Ying Zhou28.
Abstract
Seed dispersal enables plants to reach hospitable germination sites and escape natural enemies. Understanding when and how much seed dispersal matters to plant fitness is critical for understanding plant population and community dynamics. At the same time, the complexity of factors that determine if a seed will be successfully dispersed and subsequently develop into a reproductive plant is daunting. Quantifying all factors that may influence seed dispersal effectiveness for any potential seed-vector relationship would require an unrealistically large amount of time, materials and financial resources. On the other hand, being able to make dispersal predictions is critical for predicting whether single species and entire ecosystems will be resilient to global change. Building on current frameworks, we here posit that seed dispersal ecology should adopt plant functional groups as analytical units to reduce this complexity to manageable levels. Functional groups can be used to distinguish, for their constituent species, whether it matters (i) if seeds are dispersed, (ii) into what context they are dispersed and (iii) what vectors disperse them. To avoid overgeneralization, we propose that the utility of these functional groups may be assessed by generating predictions based on the groups and then testing those predictions against species-specific data. We suggest that data collection and analysis can then be guided by robust functional group definitions. Generalizing across similar species in this way could help us to better understand the population and community dynamics of plants and tackle the complexity of seed dispersal as well as its disruption.Entities:
Keywords: dependency; directed dispersal; dispersal vectors; generalization; mutualism; seed dispersal effectiveness
Year: 2019 PMID: 30895154 PMCID: PMC6420810 DOI: 10.1093/aobpla/plz006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AoB Plants Impact factor: 3.276
Figure 1.Seed dispersal exemplifies ecological complexity. Survival to adulthood and the fitness of individual adults are influenced by pre-, mid- and post-dispersal variables including the availability of abiotic and biotic vectors; the behaviours, preferences, morphology and physiology of dispersers; the spatio-temporal heterogeneity in seed deposition locations; and the probability of encountering other mutualists, facilitators, predators, pathogens and competitors following dispersal.
Functional groups relevant to the importance of seed dispersal for seed survival and thereby plant population and community dynamics. We propose that researchers and conservation planners determine whether target plant species belong to functional groups for which dispersal disruption is likely to significantly decrease fitness vs. have only minor effects on fitness. These groups are categorized based on how much it matters whether a seed is dispersed (shown in red; groups 1–3); how much it matters where or when dispersal occurs (shown in blue; groups 4–14); and how much it matters what vector disperses the seed (shown in green; groups 15–17). Applying vulnerability assessments and SDE calculations at the level of these functional groups may enable us to achieve a predictive understanding of seed dispersal ecology in the face of combined global change and complexity. *For species exhibiting a measurable fitness boost from dispersal, seed size may dictate which abiotic or biotic vectors are effective.
| Functional group category | Characteristics of functional groups likely significantly affected by seed dispersal disruption | Characteristics of functional groups likely less affected by seed dispersal disruption | Sample references |
|---|---|---|---|
| Groups for which plant fitness is affected by whether seeds are dispersed. | High colonization ability | High competitive ability |
|
| Long-distance dispersal adaptations | Local dispersal adaptations |
| |
| Density-dependent survival | Density-independent survival |
| |
| Groups for which plant fitness is affected by where or when dispersal occurs. | Thin/vulnerable seed coats | Thick/hard/spiky seed coats |
|
| Shade-intolerant | Shade-tolerant |
| |
| Fire-intolerant | Fire-tolerant |
| |
| Self-incompatible | Self-compatible |
| |
| Reproduction by seed only | Reproduces asexually |
| |
| Intolerant of low nutrients | Tolerant of low nutrients |
| |
| Low phenotypic plasticity | High phenotypic plasticity |
| |
| Metapopulation-dependent | Continuous population distribution |
| |
| Negative distance-dependent mortality | No negative distance-dependent mortality |
| |
| Inability to seed bank | Seed banking |
| |
| Seasonal dispersal | Low dispersal seasonality |
| |
| Groups for which plant fitness is affected by the vector of dispersal | Seed size* | Seed size* |
|
| Intraspecific competitor/non-facilitator | Intraspecific facilitator |
| |
| Seed coat with germination inhibitors | No seed coat germination inhibitors |
|