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Long‐term consistency in spatial patterns of primate seed dispersal
Authors:Eckhard W Heymann  Laurence Culot  Christoph Knogge  Tony Enrique Noriega Piña  Emérita R Tirado Herrera  Matthias Klapproth  Dietmar Zinner
Affiliation:1. Verhaltens?kologie & Soziobiologie, Deutsches Primatenzentrum, Leibniz‐Institut für Primatenforschung, G?ttingen, Germany;2. Laboratório de Primatologia, Departamento de Zoologia, Universidade Estadual Paulista, Rio Claro, SP, Brazil;3. Primatology Research Group, Behavioral Biology Unit, University of Liège, Liège, Belgium;4. Facultad de Ciencias Biológicas, Universidad Nacional de la Amazonía Peruana, Iquitos, Peru;5. Kognitive Ethologie, Deutsches Primatenzentrum, Leibniz‐Institut für Primatenforschung, G?ttingen, Germany
Abstract:Seed dispersal is a key ecological process in tropical forests, with effects on various levels ranging from plant reproductive success to the carbon storage potential of tropical rainforests. On a local and landscape scale, spatial patterns of seed dispersal create the template for the recruitment process and thus influence the population dynamics of plant species. The strength of this influence will depend on the long‐term consistency of spatial patterns of seed dispersal. We examined the long‐term consistency of spatial patterns of seed dispersal with spatially explicit data on seed dispersal by two neotropical primate species, Leontocebus nigrifrons and Saguinus mystax (Callitrichidae), collected during four independent studies between 1994 and 2013. Using distributions of dispersal probability over distances independent of plant species, cumulative dispersal distances, and kernel density estimates, we show that spatial patterns of seed dispersal are highly consistent over time. For a specific plant species, the legume Parkia panurensis, the convergence of cumulative distributions at a distance of 300 m, and the high probability of dispersal within 100 m from source trees coincide with the dimension of the spatial–genetic structure on the embryo/juvenile (300 m) and adult stage (100 m), respectively, of this plant species. Our results are the first demonstration of long‐term consistency of spatial patterns of seed dispersal created by tropical frugivores. Such consistency may translate into idiosyncratic patterns of regeneration.
Keywords:dispersal  dispersal distances  frugivores  kernel density estimates  plant–  animal interactions  tropical forest
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