Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/17980
Title: Primary seed dispersal by three Neotropical seed-predating primates (Cacajao melanocephalus ouakary, Chiropotes chiropotes and Chiropotes albinasus)
Authors: Barnett, Adrian Ashton
Boyle, Sarah Ann
Pinto, Líliam Patrícia
Lourenc, Waldete C.
Almeida, Thais
Silva, Welma Sousa
Ronchi-Teles, Beatriz
Bezerra, Bruna
Ross, Caroline
MacLarnon, Ann M.
Spironello, Wilson Roberto
Keywords: Behavioral Ecology
Bird
Diet
Frugivory
Germination
Neotropical Region
Primate
Seed Dispersal
Seed Predation
Survivorship
Amazonas
Cacajao
Cacajao Melanocephalus
Chiropotes
Chiropotes Albinasus
Chiropotes
Duroia
Macrolobium Acaciifolium
Pithecia Pithecia
Pitheciinae
Primates
Psittacidae
Velutina
Vertebrata
Issue Date: 2012
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Journal of Tropical Ecology
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 28, Número 6, Pags. 543-555
Abstract: The Neotropics house two guilds of large arboreal vertebrate seed predators: parrots and the pitheciin primates. Both have diets dominated by immature fruits. The possibility of members of the Pitheciinae (genera Cacajao, Chiropotes and Pithecia) acting as occasional seed dispersers has been mooted, but not experimentally shown. We combined primate behavioural data and seed germination data from three separate field studies in the Brazilian states of Amazonas and Pari to analyse patterns of post-consumption seed survivorship for seeds discarded by three pitheciin species (Cacajao melanocephalus ouakary, Chiropotes chiropotes and Chiropotes albinasus). We then calculated the frequency of dispersal events for four species eaten by C. m. ouakary. All three primate species dropped intact seeds while feeding, and 30.7% of 674 dropped seeds germinated ex situ. Undamaged seeds from unripe and ripe samples germinated (29.3% and 42.7%, respectively), and all three primate species carried some fruits up to 20 m from the parent tree before consuming them. Potential seed-dispersal events varied from 1 (Macrolobium acaciifolium) per fruiting cycle to more than 6500 (Duroia velutina), suggesting that there are differences in dispersal potential. In summary, although they are highly specialized seed predators, these primates may also act as important dispersers for some plant species, and effective dispersal is not restricted to ripe fruits, as immature fruits removed from a tree may continue to mature and the seeds later germinate, a much-neglected aspect of dispersal ecology. The possibility that similar events occur in parrots should be experimentally investigated. © Cambridge University Press 2012.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1017/S0266467412000600
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