Employing Plant Functional Groups to Advance Seed Dispersal Ecology and Conservation

demographic consequences
density-dependence
diversity
elasticity analysis
flying foxes
growth-rate
long-distance dispersal
rain
survival
tropical forest
Authors

Clare Aslan

Noelle G Beckman

Haldre S Rogers

Judie Bronstein

Damaris Zurell

Florian Hartig

Katriona Shea

Liba Pejchar

Mike Neubert

John Poulsen

Janneke HilleRisLambers

Maria Miriti

Bette Loiselle

Edu Effiom

Jenny Zambrano

Geno Schupp

Gesine Pufal

Jeremy Johnson

James M Bullock

Jedediah Brodie

Emilio Bruna

Robert Stephen Cantrell

Robin Decker

Evan Fricke

Katie Gurski

Alan Hastings

Oleg Kogan

Onja Razafindratsima

Manette Sandor

Sebastian Schreiber

Rebecca Snell

Christopher Strickland

Ying Zhou

Doi
Abstract
Seed dispersal enables plants to reach hospitable germination sites and escape natural enemies. Understanding when and how much seed dispersal matters to plant fitness is critical for understanding plant population and community dynamics. At the same time, the complexity of factors that determine if a seed will be successfully dispersed and subsequently develop into a reproductive plant is daunting. Quantifying all factors that may influence seed dispersal effectiveness for any potential seed-vector relationship would require an unrealistically large amount of time, materials and financial resources. On the other hand, being able to make dispersal predictions is critical for predicting whether single species and entire ecosystems will be resilient to global change. Building on current frameworks, we here posit that seed dispersal ecology should adopt plant functional groups as analytical units to reduce this complexity to manageable levels. Functional groups can be used to distinguish, for their constituent species, whether it matters (i) if seeds are dispersed, (ii) into what context they are dispersed and (iii) what vectors disperse them. To avoid overgeneralization, we propose that the utility of these functional groups may be assessed by generating predictions based on the groups and then testing those predictions against species-specific data. We suggest that data collection and analysis can then be guided by robust functional group definitions. Generalizing across similar species in this way could help us to better understand the population and community dynamics of plants and tackle the complexity of seed dispersal as well as its disruption.
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