Bulbuls and crows provide complementary seed dispersal for China’s endangered trees

Abstract Background Different functional frugivores generally exhibit unequal contributions, both in terms of quantity (seed removal) and quality (seedling recruitment), to effective seed dispersal of plant species. However, variations in this dispersal pattern generated by frugivores across differe...

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Main Authors: Bing Bai, Ning Li, Xinhai Li, Changhu Lu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-11-01
Series:Avian Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40657-017-0089-y
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spelling doaj-5239e22f66b8486eb8e6557ec2610bbb2020-11-24T22:40:09ZengBMCAvian Research2053-71662017-11-01811610.1186/s40657-017-0089-yBulbuls and crows provide complementary seed dispersal for China’s endangered treesBing Bai0Ning Li1Xinhai Li2Changhu Lu3Yunnan Forestry Technological CollegeCollege of Food Science, Nanjing Xiaozhuang UniversityInstitute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of SciencesLaboratory of Plant-Animal Interactions, College of Forest Resources and Environment, Nanjing Forestry UniversityAbstract Background Different functional frugivores generally exhibit unequal contributions, both in terms of quantity (seed removal) and quality (seedling recruitment), to effective seed dispersal of plant species. However, variations in this dispersal pattern generated by frugivores across different regions are still unknown. Methods In our study, we evaluated the contributions of two functional frugivore bird groups, the bulbuls (Pycnonotidae) and crows (Corvidae), in both the seed removal and seedling recruitment of the endangered Chinese yew tree (Taxus chinensis) across three different geographical regions in eastern China. Results The dominant crow species, Urocissa erythrorhyncha, was the most common disperser crow species at all sites, while the dominant bulbul species varied across the three sites. Furthermore, the two functional groups of dispersers diverged in the aspects of seed removal (quantity) and seedling recruitment pattern (quality). While bulbuls outperformed crows in seed removal (quantity), crows took more seeds to a safer site for seedlings (quality). Conclusions Our results highlight the importance of variations in the effective seed dispersal patterns of different functional disperser groups across different regions in the conservation and management of endangered tree species.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40657-017-0089-yComplementary seed dispersalEffective seed dispersalSeed removalSeedling recruitmentTaxus chinensis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bing Bai
Ning Li
Xinhai Li
Changhu Lu
spellingShingle Bing Bai
Ning Li
Xinhai Li
Changhu Lu
Bulbuls and crows provide complementary seed dispersal for China’s endangered trees
Avian Research
Complementary seed dispersal
Effective seed dispersal
Seed removal
Seedling recruitment
Taxus chinensis
author_facet Bing Bai
Ning Li
Xinhai Li
Changhu Lu
author_sort Bing Bai
title Bulbuls and crows provide complementary seed dispersal for China’s endangered trees
title_short Bulbuls and crows provide complementary seed dispersal for China’s endangered trees
title_full Bulbuls and crows provide complementary seed dispersal for China’s endangered trees
title_fullStr Bulbuls and crows provide complementary seed dispersal for China’s endangered trees
title_full_unstemmed Bulbuls and crows provide complementary seed dispersal for China’s endangered trees
title_sort bulbuls and crows provide complementary seed dispersal for china’s endangered trees
publisher BMC
series Avian Research
issn 2053-7166
publishDate 2017-11-01
description Abstract Background Different functional frugivores generally exhibit unequal contributions, both in terms of quantity (seed removal) and quality (seedling recruitment), to effective seed dispersal of plant species. However, variations in this dispersal pattern generated by frugivores across different regions are still unknown. Methods In our study, we evaluated the contributions of two functional frugivore bird groups, the bulbuls (Pycnonotidae) and crows (Corvidae), in both the seed removal and seedling recruitment of the endangered Chinese yew tree (Taxus chinensis) across three different geographical regions in eastern China. Results The dominant crow species, Urocissa erythrorhyncha, was the most common disperser crow species at all sites, while the dominant bulbul species varied across the three sites. Furthermore, the two functional groups of dispersers diverged in the aspects of seed removal (quantity) and seedling recruitment pattern (quality). While bulbuls outperformed crows in seed removal (quantity), crows took more seeds to a safer site for seedlings (quality). Conclusions Our results highlight the importance of variations in the effective seed dispersal patterns of different functional disperser groups across different regions in the conservation and management of endangered tree species.
topic Complementary seed dispersal
Effective seed dispersal
Seed removal
Seedling recruitment
Taxus chinensis
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40657-017-0089-y
work_keys_str_mv AT bingbai bulbulsandcrowsprovidecomplementaryseeddispersalforchinasendangeredtrees
AT ningli bulbulsandcrowsprovidecomplementaryseeddispersalforchinasendangeredtrees
AT xinhaili bulbulsandcrowsprovidecomplementaryseeddispersalforchinasendangeredtrees
AT changhulu bulbulsandcrowsprovidecomplementaryseeddispersalforchinasendangeredtrees
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