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Spatiotemporal strategies that facilitate recruitment in a habitat specialist tree species

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Abstract Our understanding of processes underlying plant recruitment emerges from species and habitats that are widely distributed at regional and global scales. However, the applicability of dispersal-recruitment models and the role of dispersal limitation versus microsite limitation have not been examined for specialized habitats. In patchy, freshwater Myristica swamp forests (Western Ghats, India), we examine the roles of primary seed dispersal, secondary seed removal and microsite suitability for the establishment of a swamp specialist tree, Myristica fatua . We estimated primary seed shadows, performed secondary removal experiments and enumerated recruits in swamp sites. Steady-state fruiting was observed with the extended production (>7 months) of small numbers of fruits. Frugivores dropped most of the large and heavy seeds under parent crowns, while a few seeds were transported over short distances by hornbills. Seed placement experiments indicated that removal, germination and establishment were similar within swamp microsites, while seeds failed to survive in matrix habitats surrounding the swamp. Crabs, which were major secondary removers of M. fatua , did not alter the initial seed dispersal patterns substantially, which led to the retention of seeds within the swamp. Distribution of saplings and adults from previous seasons also suggest that dispersal-recruitment dynamics in the swamp specialist M. fatua did not strictly follow predictions of Janzen-Connell model while abiotic effects were significant. Large seeds, steady-state fruiting and small crop sizes may be significant selective forces facilitating escape from density and distance-dependent effects in space and time in specialist plant species such as M. fatua .
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Title: Spatiotemporal strategies that facilitate recruitment in a habitat specialist tree species
Description:
Abstract Our understanding of processes underlying plant recruitment emerges from species and habitats that are widely distributed at regional and global scales.
However, the applicability of dispersal-recruitment models and the role of dispersal limitation versus microsite limitation have not been examined for specialized habitats.
In patchy, freshwater Myristica swamp forests (Western Ghats, India), we examine the roles of primary seed dispersal, secondary seed removal and microsite suitability for the establishment of a swamp specialist tree, Myristica fatua .
We estimated primary seed shadows, performed secondary removal experiments and enumerated recruits in swamp sites.
Steady-state fruiting was observed with the extended production (>7 months) of small numbers of fruits.
Frugivores dropped most of the large and heavy seeds under parent crowns, while a few seeds were transported over short distances by hornbills.
Seed placement experiments indicated that removal, germination and establishment were similar within swamp microsites, while seeds failed to survive in matrix habitats surrounding the swamp.
Crabs, which were major secondary removers of M.
fatua , did not alter the initial seed dispersal patterns substantially, which led to the retention of seeds within the swamp.
Distribution of saplings and adults from previous seasons also suggest that dispersal-recruitment dynamics in the swamp specialist M.
fatua did not strictly follow predictions of Janzen-Connell model while abiotic effects were significant.
Large seeds, steady-state fruiting and small crop sizes may be significant selective forces facilitating escape from density and distance-dependent effects in space and time in specialist plant species such as M.
fatua .

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