| Literature DB >> 31346187 |
Eckhard W Heymann1, Laurence Culot2,3,4, Christoph Knogge2, Andrew C Smith5, Emérita R Tirado Herrera2,6, Britta Müller2,7, Mojca Stojan-Dolar2, Yvan Lledo Ferrer2,8, Petra Kubisch2,9, Denis Kupsch2,10, Darja Slana2, Mareike Lena Koopmann2,11, Birgit Ziegenhagen12, Ronald Bialozyt12,13, Christina Mengel12, Julien Hambuckers14,15, Katrin Heer12.
Abstract
Increasingly large proportions of tropical forests are anthropogenically disturbed. Where natural regeneration is possible at all, it requires the input of plant seeds through seed dispersal from the forest matrix. Zoochorous seed dispersal - the major seed dispersal mode for woody plants in tropical forests - is particularly important for natural regeneration. In this study, covering a period of more than 20 years, we show that small New World primates, the tamarins Saguinus mystax and Leontocebus nigrifrons, increase their use of an anthropogenically disturbed area over time and disperse seeds from primary forest tree species into this area. Through monitoring the fate of seeds and through parentage analyses of seedlings of the legume Parkia panurensis from the disturbed area and candidate parents from the primary forest matrix, we show that tamarin seed dispersal is effective and contributes to the natural regeneration of the disturbed area.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31346187 PMCID: PMC6658533 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-46683-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Temporal patterns of secondary forest use by the tamarins. (a) Long-term pattern (yearly means), corrected for uneven representation of months and potential seasonal variation. (b) Yearly pattern (●: monthly means; whiskers: monthly minima and maxima). Blue dots: months with ≥250 mm of rainfall; orange dots: months with <250 mm of rainfall.
Figure 2Use of secondary forest in months with ≥250 mm of rainfall and <250 mm of rainfall. ●: means; ○: outliers; *extremes.
Figure 3Parkia panurensis seedling. ©Eckhard W. Heymann, 2016.
Figure 4(a) Locations of seedlings and juveniles (green triangles) in the secondary forest and of candidate parents (grey dots) in the primary forest. Coordinates are UTM–WGS 84 for cell 18. (b) Enlarged view of the position of seedlings and juveniles. The number indicates the location of two seedlings at the same GPS position.
Figure 5Distances between Parkia panurensis seedlings and juveniles and the near and distant candidate parent.
Figure 6Satellite image of EBQB and surrounding areas. : location of the field station; : secondary forest area. (a) 2011; (b) 2018. Source: Google Earth.
Figure 7Typical vegetation in secondary forest at EBQB. Foto ©Eckhard W. Heymann, 2010.
Figure 8Vegetation cover of primary and secondary forest at EBQB. Grey bars: primary forest; black bars: secondary forest. Reproduced with permission from[43].