Authors
Patrick A Jansen, Ben T Hirsch, Willem-Jan Emsens, Veronica Zamora-Gutierrez, Martin Wikelski, Roland Kays
Publication date
2012/7/31
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
109
Issue
31
Pages
12610-12615
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
The Neotropics have many plant species that seem to be adapted for seed dispersal by megafauna that went extinct in the late Pleistocene. Given the crucial importance of seed dispersal for plant persistence, it remains a mystery how these plants have survived more than 10,000 y without their mutualist dispersers. Here we present support for the hypothesis that secondary seed dispersal by scatter-hoarding rodents has facilitated the persistence of these large-seeded species. We used miniature radio transmitters to track the dispersal of reputedly megafaunal seeds by Central American agoutis, which scatter-hoard seeds in shallow caches in the soil throughout the forest. We found that seeds were initially cached at mostly short distances and then quickly dug up again. However, rather than eating the recovered seeds, agoutis continued to move and recache the seeds, up to 36 times. Agoutis dispersed an …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
PA Jansen, BT Hirsch, WJ Emsens… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2012