Mating Behavior Drives Seed Dispersal by the Long‐wattled Umbrellabird Cephalopterus penduliger |
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Authors: | Jordan Karubian Renata Durães Jenny L Storey Thomas B Smith |
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Institution: | 1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Tulane University, , New Orleans, Louisiana, 70118‐5698 U.S.A;2. Center for Tropical Research, Institute of the Environment, University of California at Los Angeles, , Los Angeles, California, 90095 U.S.A;3. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California at Los Angeles, , Los Angeles, California, 90095‐1606 U.S.A |
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Abstract: | Frugivores exhibit considerable variation in the seed dispersal services they provide. Understanding what drives these differences is a key goal for ecologists because of the central role seed dispersal plays in shaping ecological and genetic diversity in plant populations. The lek‐mating system of the Long‐wattled Umbrellabird (Cephalopterus penduliger) provides a powerful lens to examine how mating behavior may impact seed dispersal outcomes. As in all lek‐breeding species, male Umbrellabirds congregate in traditional sites (leks) to display, whereas females are solitary and visit leks only rarely. This study demonstrates how differences in mating behavior between the sexes drive distinctive seed movement and deposition patterns by male vs. female Umbrellabirds. Using radio tracking and gut retention trials, we documented divergent movement patterns between the sexes that are directly attributable to mating behavior differences. These movement differences led males to disperse seeds long distances from source trees and to deposit the majority of seeds they ingested within the lek; females dispersed seeds shorter distances and more evenly across the landscape. We empirically confirmed that the density of dispersed seeds was higher in leks than in control areas outside the lek, yet found no evidence that this higher density of seeds in leks reduced probability of seedling establishment. This research not only provides a mechanistic explanation for long dispersal distances and high levels of genetic diversity previously reported for seeds in Umbrellabird leks, but also highlights the importance of explicitly considering behavior in studies of animal‐mediated seed dispersal. |
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Keywords: | Ecuador
Ficus crassiuscula
Janzen‐Connell lek Neotropical Chocó rain forest
Oenocarpus bataua
radio telemetry
Virola dixonii
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