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Synergistic effects of seed disperser and predator loss on recruitment success and long-term consequences for carbon stocks in tropical rainforests

The extinction of large frugivores has consequences for the recruitment of large-seeded plants with potential lasting effects on carbon storage in tropical rainforests. However, previous studies relating frugivore defaunation to changes in carbon storage ignore potential compensation by redundant fr...

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Published in:Scientific reports 2017-08, Vol.7 (1), p.7662-8, Article 7662
Main Authors: Culot, Laurence, Bello, Carolina, Batista, João Luis Ferreira, do Couto, Hilton Thadeu Zarate, Galetti, Mauro
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description The extinction of large frugivores has consequences for the recruitment of large-seeded plants with potential lasting effects on carbon storage in tropical rainforests. However, previous studies relating frugivore defaunation to changes in carbon storage ignore potential compensation by redundant frugivores and the effects of seed predators on plant recruitment. Based on empirical data of the recruitment success of a large-seeded hardwood tree species ( Cryptocarya mandioccana , Lauraceae) across a defaunation gradient of seed dispersers and predators, we show that defaunation increases both seed dispersal limitation and seed predation. Depending on the level of seed predator loss, plant recruitment is reduced by 70.7–94.9% as a result of the loss of seed dispersers. The loss of large seed predators increases the net seed mortality by 7–30% due to the increased abundance of small granivorous rodents. The loss of large seed dispersers can be buffered by the compensatory effects of smaller frugivores in seed removal, but it is not sufficient to prevent a decrease in plant recruitment. We show that the conservation of both seed predators and dispersers is necessary for the recruitment of large-seeded plants. Since these plants contribute substantially to carbon stocks, defaunation can jeopardize the maintenance of tropical forest carbon storage.
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subjects 631/158/2450
631/158/2454
631/158/2458
631/158/853
Animals
Carbon
Carbon Cycle
Carbon sequestration
Ecosystem
Frugivores
Granivory
Humanities and Social Sciences
multidisciplinary
Plant species
Predation
Predators
Predatory Behavior
Rainforest
Rainforests
Recruitment
Science
Science (multidisciplinary)
Seed Dispersal
Seed predation
Seeds
Species extinction
Synergistic effect
Tropical Climate
Tropical forests
title Synergistic effects of seed disperser and predator loss on recruitment success and long-term consequences for carbon stocks in tropical rainforests
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