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Secondary seed dispersal of Erodiophyllum elderi,a patchily distributed short‐lived perennial in the arid lands of Australia
Authors:LOUISE EMMERSON  JOSÉ M. FACELLI  PETER CHESSON  HUGH POSSINGHAM
Affiliation:1. Ecology and Evolutionary Biology,;2. Research School of Biological Sciences, Australian National University, Australian Capital Territory, and;3. Department of Applied Mathematics, The University of Adelaide, 5005 0200, South Australia,;4. Australian Antarctic Division, Channel Highway, Kingston, Tas. 7050, Australia (Email: louise.emmerson@aad.gov.au);5. Present address: Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona 85721, USA.;6. Present address: The Ecology Centre, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland 4072, Australia.
Abstract:We investigated secondary dispersal of propagules of Erodiophyllum elderi (Asteraceae), a short‐lived perennial plant growing in small patches in the arid lands of southern Australia. In spite of its importance for population dynamics, secondary dispersal is a little understood process. We monitored the dispersal of 2280 large woody capitula (seed heads) released in six E. elderi patches for 9 months. Colour‐coded seed heads were located at night using UV light and their distance and direction from the release point were measured. Over the 9‐month period, more seed heads moved, and those that did, moved further in areas with high herbivore activity. Overall dispersal distance across the ground was limited to less than 30 m. Dispersal patterns were related to the topographical slope at the release site: seed heads moved further, and more dispersed on steeper slopes unless the steep slopes had sandy soil in which case seed heads were buried, caught or there was reduced sheet water flow limiting their dispersal potential. After several months, seed head dispersal virtually ceased as seed heads became stuck in the debris and soil after heavy rains or further dispersal became unlikely when seed heads reached locally low‐lying areas. Secondary dispersal patterns suggest two distinctly different influences associated with the presence of herbivores: the direct movement of seed heads by trampling from sheep (an introduced herbivore) and the indirect effect of a reduced standing biomass from grazing. Reduced vegetation cover allows seed head redistribution via sheet water flow during large rainfall events.
Keywords:above‐ground seed bank  Erodiophyllum elderi  patchy distribution  secondary dispersal  xeric vegetation
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