Publication in Journal of Ecology by Professor DING Ping of Institute of Ecology

Title: Cascading effects of forested area and isolation on seed dispersal effectiveness of rodents on subtropical islands


Di Zeng, Robert K. Swihart, Yuhao Zhao, Xingfeng Si, Ping Ding

First published: 16 December 2018|https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2745.13122


Abstract

1. Habitat loss and fragmentation often leads to defaunation of largebodied mammals, and their loss could trigger release from topdown control or food resource competition for small mammal seed dispersers, which in turn may affect the effectiveness of seed dispersal by altering the number of dispersed seeds or the manner in which they are dispersed. Although rodents are primary seed dispersers in habitat subjected to defaunation, changes in seed dispersal effectiveness of rodents along mammalian defaunation gradients, and empirical support for mechanisms underlying alteration of this ecological process, are unclear.

2. We assessed the direct and indirect effects of forested area and isolation on seed dispersal effectiveness of rodents on 21 study islands with varying levels of defaunation in the Thousand Island Lake, China. We used camera sampling, live traps and semiquantitative acorn counts to assess occurrence of largebodied mammal species, relative abundance of small rodent species and seed crop size respectively. Seed dispersal, postdispersal seed survival, seedling emergence, and seedling survival were estimated by tracking fates of tagged acorns and by planting acorns in exclosures.

3. Forested area had positive indirect effects on seed dispersal effectiveness through defaunation and rodent competition for acorns, whereas isolation had negative direct and weaker positive indirect effects on seed dispersal effectiveness mediated by loss of largebodied mammals and rodent competition for acorns. Loss of largebodied mammals negatively affected seed dispersal effectiveness indirectly by virtue of its impact on rodent competition for acorns. Seed dispersal effectiveness exhibited a unimodal relationship with intensity of rodent competition for acorns, peaking at intermediate levels.

4. Synthesis. Indirect effects of island attributes mediated by defaunation of largebodied mammals on small or isolated islands appear to drive altered competition for food among rodents and decreased seed dispersal effectiveness. Altered interactions between acorns and their rodent consumers/dispersers can substantially affect oak population demography in the Thousand Island Lake system. More broadly, our findings highlight the importance to the seed dispersal process of multiple interwoven effects between habitat fragmentation and defaunation of largebodied mammals.

 

Link: https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2745.13122


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