Dispersal-related plant traits are associated with range size in the Atlantic Forest

Aim: The efficiency of animal-mediated seed dispersal is threatened by the decline of animal populations, especially in tropical forests. We hypothesise that large-seeded plants with animal-mediated dispersal tend to have limited geographic ranges and face an increased risk of extinction due to the potential decline in seed dispersal by large-bodied fruit-eating and seed-dispersing animals (frugivores). Location: Atlantic Forest, Brazil, South America. Taxon: Angiosperms. Methods: First, we collected dispersal-related traits (dispersal syndrome, fruit size, and seed size), growth form (tree, climber, and other) and preferred vegetation type (open and closed) data for 1052 Atlantic Forest plant species. Next, we integrated these with occurrence records, extinction risk assessments, and phylogenetic trees. Finally, we performed phylogenetic generalised least squares regressions to test the direct and interactive effects of dispersal-related traits and vegetation type on geographical range size. Results: Large-seeded species had smaller range sizes than small-seeded species, but only for species with animal-mediated dispersal, not for those dispersed by abiotic mechanisms. However, plants with abiotic dispersal had overall smaller range sizes than plants with animal-mediated dispersal. Furthermore, we found that species restricted to forests had smaller ranges than those occurring in open or mixed vegetation. Finally, at least 29% of the Atlantic Forest flora is threatened by extinction, but this was not related to plant dispersal syndromes. Main Conclusions: Large-seeded plants with animal-mediated dispersal may be suffering from dispersal limitation, potentially due to past and ongoing defaunation of large-bodied frugivores, leading to small range sizes. Other factors, such as deforestation and fragmentation, will probably modulate the effects of dispersal on range size, and ultimately extinction. Our study sheds light on the relationship between plant traits, mutualistic interactions, and distribution that are key to the functioning of tropical forests.

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Main Authors: Petrocelli, Isis, Alzate, Adriana, Zizka, Alexander, Onstein, Renske E.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:defaunation, extinction risk, frugivory, phylogeny, range size, seed dispersal, tropical forest,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/dispersal-related-plant-traits-are-associated-with-range-size-in-
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-6316032024-10-30 Petrocelli, Isis Alzate, Adriana Zizka, Alexander Onstein, Renske E. Article/Letter to editor Diversity and Distributions 30 (2024) 7 ISSN: 1366-9516 Dispersal-related plant traits are associated with range size in the Atlantic Forest 2024 Aim: The efficiency of animal-mediated seed dispersal is threatened by the decline of animal populations, especially in tropical forests. We hypothesise that large-seeded plants with animal-mediated dispersal tend to have limited geographic ranges and face an increased risk of extinction due to the potential decline in seed dispersal by large-bodied fruit-eating and seed-dispersing animals (frugivores). Location: Atlantic Forest, Brazil, South America. Taxon: Angiosperms. Methods: First, we collected dispersal-related traits (dispersal syndrome, fruit size, and seed size), growth form (tree, climber, and other) and preferred vegetation type (open and closed) data for 1052 Atlantic Forest plant species. Next, we integrated these with occurrence records, extinction risk assessments, and phylogenetic trees. Finally, we performed phylogenetic generalised least squares regressions to test the direct and interactive effects of dispersal-related traits and vegetation type on geographical range size. Results: Large-seeded species had smaller range sizes than small-seeded species, but only for species with animal-mediated dispersal, not for those dispersed by abiotic mechanisms. However, plants with abiotic dispersal had overall smaller range sizes than plants with animal-mediated dispersal. Furthermore, we found that species restricted to forests had smaller ranges than those occurring in open or mixed vegetation. Finally, at least 29% of the Atlantic Forest flora is threatened by extinction, but this was not related to plant dispersal syndromes. Main Conclusions: Large-seeded plants with animal-mediated dispersal may be suffering from dispersal limitation, potentially due to past and ongoing defaunation of large-bodied frugivores, leading to small range sizes. Other factors, such as deforestation and fragmentation, will probably modulate the effects of dispersal on range size, and ultimately extinction. Our study sheds light on the relationship between plant traits, mutualistic interactions, and distribution that are key to the functioning of tropical forests. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/dispersal-related-plant-traits-are-associated-with-range-size-in- 10.1111/ddi.13856 https://edepot.wur.nl/661571 defaunation extinction risk frugivory phylogeny range size seed dispersal tropical forest https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic defaunation
extinction risk
frugivory
phylogeny
range size
seed dispersal
tropical forest
defaunation
extinction risk
frugivory
phylogeny
range size
seed dispersal
tropical forest
spellingShingle defaunation
extinction risk
frugivory
phylogeny
range size
seed dispersal
tropical forest
defaunation
extinction risk
frugivory
phylogeny
range size
seed dispersal
tropical forest
Petrocelli, Isis
Alzate, Adriana
Zizka, Alexander
Onstein, Renske E.
Dispersal-related plant traits are associated with range size in the Atlantic Forest
description Aim: The efficiency of animal-mediated seed dispersal is threatened by the decline of animal populations, especially in tropical forests. We hypothesise that large-seeded plants with animal-mediated dispersal tend to have limited geographic ranges and face an increased risk of extinction due to the potential decline in seed dispersal by large-bodied fruit-eating and seed-dispersing animals (frugivores). Location: Atlantic Forest, Brazil, South America. Taxon: Angiosperms. Methods: First, we collected dispersal-related traits (dispersal syndrome, fruit size, and seed size), growth form (tree, climber, and other) and preferred vegetation type (open and closed) data for 1052 Atlantic Forest plant species. Next, we integrated these with occurrence records, extinction risk assessments, and phylogenetic trees. Finally, we performed phylogenetic generalised least squares regressions to test the direct and interactive effects of dispersal-related traits and vegetation type on geographical range size. Results: Large-seeded species had smaller range sizes than small-seeded species, but only for species with animal-mediated dispersal, not for those dispersed by abiotic mechanisms. However, plants with abiotic dispersal had overall smaller range sizes than plants with animal-mediated dispersal. Furthermore, we found that species restricted to forests had smaller ranges than those occurring in open or mixed vegetation. Finally, at least 29% of the Atlantic Forest flora is threatened by extinction, but this was not related to plant dispersal syndromes. Main Conclusions: Large-seeded plants with animal-mediated dispersal may be suffering from dispersal limitation, potentially due to past and ongoing defaunation of large-bodied frugivores, leading to small range sizes. Other factors, such as deforestation and fragmentation, will probably modulate the effects of dispersal on range size, and ultimately extinction. Our study sheds light on the relationship between plant traits, mutualistic interactions, and distribution that are key to the functioning of tropical forests.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet defaunation
extinction risk
frugivory
phylogeny
range size
seed dispersal
tropical forest
author Petrocelli, Isis
Alzate, Adriana
Zizka, Alexander
Onstein, Renske E.
author_facet Petrocelli, Isis
Alzate, Adriana
Zizka, Alexander
Onstein, Renske E.
author_sort Petrocelli, Isis
title Dispersal-related plant traits are associated with range size in the Atlantic Forest
title_short Dispersal-related plant traits are associated with range size in the Atlantic Forest
title_full Dispersal-related plant traits are associated with range size in the Atlantic Forest
title_fullStr Dispersal-related plant traits are associated with range size in the Atlantic Forest
title_full_unstemmed Dispersal-related plant traits are associated with range size in the Atlantic Forest
title_sort dispersal-related plant traits are associated with range size in the atlantic forest
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/dispersal-related-plant-traits-are-associated-with-range-size-in-
work_keys_str_mv AT petrocelliisis dispersalrelatedplanttraitsareassociatedwithrangesizeintheatlanticforest
AT alzateadriana dispersalrelatedplanttraitsareassociatedwithrangesizeintheatlanticforest
AT zizkaalexander dispersalrelatedplanttraitsareassociatedwithrangesizeintheatlanticforest
AT onsteinrenskee dispersalrelatedplanttraitsareassociatedwithrangesizeintheatlanticforest
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