Title
Seed limitation in an Amazonian floodplain forest
Date Issued
01 May 2019
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Field Museum of Natural History
Proyecto Castaña
Publisher(s)
Ecological Society of America
Abstract
We monitored a close-spaced grid of 289 seed traps in 1.44 ha for 8.4 yr in an Amazonian floodplain forest. In a tree community containing hundreds of species, a median of just three to four species of tree seeds falls annually into each 0.5-m2 establishment site. The number of seed species reaching a given site increased linearly with time for the duration of the monitoring period, indicating a roughly random arrival of seed species in a given site-year. The number of seed species captured each year over the entire grid ranged from one-third to one-half of the total captured over the 8.4 yr of monitoring, revealing a substantial temporal component of variation in the seed rain. Seed rain at the 0.5-m2 scale displayed extreme spatial variability when all potentially viable seeds were tallied, whereas the rain of dispersed seeds was scant, more nearly uniform, and better mixed. Dispersal limitation, defined as failure of seeds to reach establishment sites, is ≥99% per year for a majority of species, explaining why seed augmentation experiments are often successful. Dispersal limitation has been evoked as an explanation for distance-dependent species turnover in tropical tree communities, but that interpretation contrasts with the fact that many Amazonian tree species possess large geographical ranges that extend for hundreds or thousands of kilometers. A better understanding of the processes that bridge the gap between the scales of seedling establishment and the regulation of forest composition will require new methodologies for studying dispersal on scales larger than those yet achieved.
Volume
100
Issue
5
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Conservación de la Biodiversidad Ecología
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85063894625
PubMed ID
Source
Ecology
ISSN of the container
00129658
Sponsor(s)
J. Terborgh designed the project, directed the fieldwork and was lead author; K. Zhu did much of the analysis; P. Alvarez-Loayza led the field team for the duration of seedfall monitoring and trained a series of technicians; F. Cornejo Valverde initiated the fieldwork and taught the rest of us how to identify seeds. We are grateful to the managers of Perú’s Manu National Park (SERNANP and, earlier, INRENA and DGFF) for annually issuing us permits to conduct research at Cocha Cashu for the last 44 years. Research assistants, far too numerous to name, contributed indispensable support in data gathering and data transcription. We thank two reviewers for helpful comments. Financial support of the Andrew Mellon Foundation and National Science Foundation (DEB0742830) is gratefully acknowledged.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus