INVESTIGADORES
ORDANO Mariano Andres
artículos
Título:
Linking the hierarchical decision-making process of fruit choice and the phenotypic selection strength on fruit traits by birds
Autor/es:
FACUNDO XAVIER PALACIO; JUAN MANUEL GIRINI; MARIANO ORDANO
Revista:
JOURNAL OF PLANT ECOLOGY-UK
Editorial:
OXFORD UNIV PRESS
Referencias:
Lugar: Oxford; Año: 2017 vol. 10 p. 713 - 720
ISSN:
1752-9921
Resumen:
Aims. Animals in search of fleshy fruits forage mostly according to the number of available fruits and then select individual fruits based on reward quality or advertised subtle traits. This hierarchical pattern of fruit choice would be translated into patterns of selection strength mediated by frugivores on fruit display traits. Thus, frugivores would exert higher selection pressures on fruit crop size and lower selection pressures on within-plant variation of phenotypic traits (infructescence, fruit and seed size). However, no attempt to link this behavioral mechanism of hierarchical trait selection to natural selection patterns has been made. Therefore, we sought to determine the relationship between the hierarchical decision-making process of fruit choice and patterns of natural selection on fruit traits.Methods. We recorded bird visits and measured fruit-related traits (fruit crop size, fruit diameter and seed weight) in a natural population of P. carthagenensis, a bird-dispersed treelet, in a Yungas forest from Argentina. To assess phenotypic selection patterns on fruit display traits we performed multivariate selection analysis, and to explicitly identify a hierarchy of fruit trait choice we used a classification tree as a predictive model.Important findings. Selection patterns on fruit display traits were in agreement with a hierarchical process of fruit choice made by birds. The strength of directional selection on the total number of fruits in a plant (i.e. fruit crop size) was nearly two times higher than on fruit size, and the classification tree analysis supported this hierarchical pattern. Our results support previous evidence that seed-dispersers shape fruit crop size with higher intensity than subindividual fruit traits. Also, high levels of sub-individual phenotypic variation of fruit display traits may be explained by relaxed selection pressures exerted by frugivores. Empirical studies also show that this pattern may constitute a general phenomenon among other plant-animal interactions.