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Seed dispersal by rivers in tropical dry forests: An overlooked process in tropical central Mexico
Authors:Karen A Esper‐Reyes  Néstor A Mariano  Raúl E Alcalá  Jaime R Bonilla‐Barbosa  Gabriel Flores‐Franco  Elisabet V Wehncke
Institution:1. Centro de Investigación en Biodiversidad y Conservación, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Morelos, Cuernavaca, Morelos, México;2. Instituto de Ambiente de Monta?a y Regiones áridas, Universidad Nacional de Chilecito, La Rioja, Argentina;3. Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas, Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Morelos, Cuernavaca, Morelos, México
Abstract:

Aims

Rivers are important corridors for the movement, migration and dispersal of aquatic organisms, including seeds from riparian plants. Although tropical dry forests (TDF) are among the most extensive and floristically rich ecosystems of tropical habitats, and the most globally endangered ecosystem, less attention has been given to riparian corridors within this ecosystem. Although most TDFs manifest peak seed dispersal during dry seasons, we hypothesized that riparian corridors may show a dispersal peak during the rainy season, due to an anticipated ‘sweep or drag effect’, resulting from river overflow and bank erosion. Our main aims were to investigate whether there were any differences in the seed communities transported by the river to sites in rainy as opposed to dry seasons, and to evaluate any possible relationship between the riparian seed community and river flow.

Location

Amacuzac River, drainage of the Balsas basin, State of Morelos, Mexico.

Methods

To evaluate the above assumption, we associated Amacuzac River flow with the number of species and seeds dispersed by water. We also characterized and evaluated differences between seed communities transported by the river during the rainy and dry seasons, and between four different sites located along the river. We used univariate and ordination NMDS techniques to evaluate patterns between seasons at the community level.

Results

Forty‐five plant species were identified from 909 seeds collected from the river. The composition of riparian seed communities was markedly different between seasons but not between sites. Seed abundances were significantly higher in the rainy than in the dry season and varied between sites. Seed species diversity in the river (H’ = 1.6–1.9) showed no significant differences between seasons or sites, but species assemblages and dominance varied according to season. Ordination techniques and subsequent fitting analyses showed that seed species composition was positively associated with river flow.

Conclusions

Seed dispersal patterns generated by rivers are significant mechanisms for structuring the composition and distribution of the riparian plant community in Mexican TDF. Varying species assemblages and seed abundance dispersed by the river throughout the year is a relevant and until now unknown consequence that may affect the dynamics and composition of riparian plant communities in this region. This study initiative will promote new avenues of research regarding plant establishment and succession.
Keywords:dispersal patterns  ecohydrology  hydrochory  restoration  riparian vegetation  seed ecology  tropical dry forests
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