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Meta‐Analysis of the Effects of Human Disturbance on Seed Dispersal by Animals
Authors:Pierre Michel Forget  Pedro Jordano  Joanna E Lambert  Anna Traveset  S Joseph Wright  Katrin Böhning‐Gaese
Institution:1. Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, , F‐91800 Brunoy, France;2. Integrative Ecology Group, Estación Biológica de Do?ana (CSIC‐EBD), Avda. Americo Vespucio s/n, Isla de La Cartuja, , E‐41092 Sevilla, Spain;3. Department of Ecological Anthropology, One UTSA Circle, , San Antonio, TX 78249 U.S.A.;4. Institut Mediterrani d’Estudis Avan?ats (CSIC‐UIB), , 07190 Esporles Mallorca, Balearic Islands, Spain;5. Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, , Apartado 0843‐03092 Balboa, Republic of Panama;6. Biodiversity, Climate Research Centre (BiK‐F), Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung, , 60325 Frankfurt (Main), Germany;7. Department of Biological Sciences, Johann Wolfgang Goethe‐Universit?t Frankfurt, , 60438 Frankfurt (Main), Germany
Abstract:Animal‐mediated seed dispersal is important for sustaining biological diversity in forest ecosystems, particularly in the tropics. Forest fragmentation, hunting, and selective logging modify forests in myriad ways and their effects on animal‐mediated seed dispersal have been examined in many case studies. However, the overall effects of different types of human disturbance on animal‐mediated seed dispersal are still unknown. We identified 35 articles that provided 83 comparisons of animal‐mediated seed dispersal between disturbed and undisturbed forests; all comparisons except one were conducted in tropical or subtropical ecosystems. We assessed the effects of forest fragmentation, hunting, and selective logging on seed dispersal of fleshy‐fruited tree species. We carried out a meta‐analysis to test whether forest fragmentation, hunting, and selective logging affected 3 components of animal‐mediated seed dispersal: frugivore visitation rate, number of seeds removed, and distance of seed dispersal. Forest fragmentation, hunting, and selective logging did not affect visitation rate and were marginally associated with a reduction in seed‐dispersal distance. Hunting and selective logging, but not fragmentation, were associated with a large reduction in the number of seeds removed. Fewer seeds of large‐seeded than of small‐seeded tree species were removed in hunted or selectively logged forests. A plausible explanation for the consistently negative effects of hunting and selective logging on large‐seeded plant species is that large frugivores, as the predominant seed dispersers for large‐seeded plant species, are the first animals to be extirpated from hunted or logged forests. The reduction in forest area after fragmentation appeared to have weaker effects on frugivore communities and animal‐mediated seed dispersal than hunting and selective logging. The differential effects of hunting and selective logging on large‐ and small‐seeded tree species underpinned case studies that showed disrupted plant‐frugivore interactions could trigger a homogenization of seed traits in tree communities in hunted or logged tropical forests. Meta Análisis de los Efectos de la Perturbación Humana sobre la Dispersión de Semillas por Animales
Keywords:frugivory  habitat fragmentation  hunting  meta‐analysis  seed removal  seed size  selective logging  tropical forest  bosque tropical  cacerí  a  fragmentació  n del há  bitat  frugivorí  a  meta aná  lisis  remoció  n de semillas  tala selectiva  tamañ  o de semilla
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