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首页> 外文期刊>Ecology and Evolution >The role of spines in anthropogenic seed dispersal on the Galápagos Islands
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The role of spines in anthropogenic seed dispersal on the Galápagos Islands

机译:脊椎在伽刺群岛的人为种子分散中的作用

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Dispersal has important ecological and evolutionary consequences for populations, but understanding the role of specific traits in dispersal can be difficult and requires careful experimentation. Moreover, understanding how humans alter dispersal is an important question, especially on oceanic islands where anthropogenic disturbance through species introductions can dramatically alter native ecosystems. In this study, we investigated the functional role of spines in seed dispersal of the plant caltrop (Tribulus cistoides L., Zygophyllaceae) by anthropogenic dispersal agents. We also tested whether humans or wildlife are more important seed dispersers of T. cistoides on the Galápagos. Tribulus cistoides is found on tropical mainland and oceanic island habitats. The dispersal structure of T. cistoides is called a mericarp, and they are typically protected by one pair of upper spines and a second pair of lower spines, but the presence and size of spines varies within and between populations. On the Galápagos, the upper and lower spines protect mericarps from seed predation by Darwin's finches. We tested whether spines play a dual role in dispersal by factorially manipulating the presence/absence of the upper and lower spines to simulate natural variation in mericarp morphology. The upper spines greatly facilitated seed dispersal, whereas the lower spines had no discernible effect on dispersal. The presence of upper spines increased dispersal rate on shoes by pedestrians 23‐fold, on fabrics (e.g., towels) and cars by nearly twofold, and the presence of upper spines increased dispersal distance by cars sixfold. When comparing dispersal rates in habitats with high (roads and foot paths) versus low (arid forest) anthropogenic activity, dispersal rates were demonstrably higher in the habitats with more human activity. These results have important implications for understanding the ecology and evolution of plant dispersal in the Anthropocene. Spines on the fruits of T. cistoides play important functional roles in anthropogenic dispersal, whereas native and introduced wildlife plays a minor role in dispersal on inhabited islands of the Galápagos. Our results imply that seed predators and humans are jointly shaping the ecology and evolution of contemporary populations of T. cistoides on the Galápagos.
机译:Dispersal对群体具有重要的生态和进化后果,但了解分散在分散中的特定特征的作用可能是困难的并且需要仔细的实验​​。此外,了解人类如何改变分散是一个重要问题,特别是在海洋岛上,通过物种介绍的人为干扰可以大大改变本地生态系统。在这项研究中,我们调查了血管在植物容器(Tribulus Courtoides L.,Zygophyllaceae)的种子分散中的功能作用通过人为分散剂。我们还测试了人类或野生动物是否更重要的是Galápagos的T.Cistoides的种子分散剂。 Tribulus Cisistoides在热带大陆和海洋岛栖息地发现。 T.Cistoides的分散结构称为MERIRARP,它们通常受到一对上刺和第二对下刺的保护,但刺的存在和尺寸在群体内和群之间变化。在Galápagos上,上下刺保护达尔文雀的种子捕食物质。我们测试了刺刺在分散中是否在分散中发挥双重作用,以便操纵上下刺和下刺的存在/不存在以模拟MERICARP形态的自然变化。上刺可促进种子分散,而下刺对分散效果没有可辨别的影响。上刺的存在在鞋子(例如毛巾)和汽车上的行人23倍上增加了鞋子上的分散速率,并且通过几乎双重,上刺的存在通过汽车六倍的分散距离增加了分散距离。当比较高(道路和脚道)的栖息地的分散率与低(干旱林)人为活性相比,在栖息地具有更多人类活动的栖息地的分散率较高。这些结果对理解植物分散在乌丙烯中的生态和演变具有重要意义。 T.奇异体果实上的刺在人体化分散中起着重要的功能作用,而本土和引入的野生动物在帕拉帕戈斯居住的岛屿上发挥着小的作用。我们的结果意味着种子掠夺者和人类正在共同塑造Galápagos上的T.Cistoides当代人群的生态和演变。

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