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Seed dispersal effectiveness increases with body size in New Zealand alpine scree weta (Deinacrida connectens)
Authors:HANNAH LARSEN  KEVIN C. BURNS
Affiliation:School of Biological Sciences, Victoria University of Wellington, PO Box 600, Wellington 6140, New Zealand (Email: kevin.burns@vuw.ac.nz)
Abstract:Weta are giant, flightless orthopterans that are endemic to New Zealand. Although they are known to consume fleshy fruits and disperse seeds after gut passage, which is unusual among insects, their effectiveness as seed dispersal mutualists is debated. We conducted a series of laboratory experiments on alpine scree weta (Deinacrida connectens) and mountain snowberries (Gaultheria depressa) to investigate how fruit consumption rates, the proportion of ingested seeds dispersed intact and weta movement patterns vary with weta body sizes. On average weta dispersed 252 snowberry seeds nightly and travelled at a rate of 4 m min?1. However, seed dispersal effectiveness varied over three orders of magnitude and was strongly associated with body sizes. Smaller weta consumed few snowberry seeds and acted primarily as seed predators. On the other hand, the largest weta consumed and dispersed thousands of seeds each night and appear to be capable of transporting seeds over large distances. Overall results indicate that scree weta shift from being weakly interacting seed predators to strongly interacting, effective seed dispersers as they increase in size.
Keywords:frugivore  fruit  mutualism  predation  dispersal
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