INVESTIGADORES
RUGGERA roman alberto
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Regional equivalence in seed dispersal of core bird species: the key to explain seed-dispersal syndromes emergence?
Autor/es:
ROMÁN A. RUGGERA; PEDRO G. BLENDINGER; MARÍA D. GOMEZ
Lugar:
Iguazú
Reunión:
Congreso; Ornithological Congress of the Americas; 2017
Institución organizadora:
Aves Argentinas / Association of Field Ornithologists / Sociedade Brasileira de Ornitologia
Resumen:
Most mutualistic networks have a great number of species interacting in a moment and space, and a core of few species disproportionally affecting the remaining species. Geographical variation in disperser diversity would intuitively avoid the emergence of seed-dispersal syndromes. However, if different core species from different sites were equivalent in the seed dispersal provided, they could act as a unique selective force for fruit traits in a regional scale. We monitored bird-fruit interactions in 10 sites of Yungas forest, in three latitudes and three altitudes. We recorded 3579 interactions between 54 bird and 69 fleshy-fruited plant species. Previous analyses determined eight core bird species, and six functional groups of fleshy-fruited plants. For each plant group, we calculated the quantitative component (QC) of seed-dispersal effectiveness provided by each core bird at each site. We built bi-plots with mean QC at x-axis and ΔQC at y-axis, comparing QC?s of all core bird pairs from different altitudes in a given latitude, and vice-versa. We found (1) pools of 1-3 core birds per site with high and equivalent QC?s showed for all plant groups, recognized as point groups close to the right lower corner of bi-plots; and (2) core species with even higher QC?s in 1-2 sites, without equivalencies, provided to singular plant groups. We discuss how the combined action of these two core bird groups could be implied in the emergence of seed-dispersal syndromes at a regional scale.