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Plant-animal interactions are key to sustaining whole communities and ecosystem function. However, their complexity may limit our understanding of the underlying mechanisms and the species involved. The ecological effects of epizoochory remain little known compared to other seed dispersal mechanisms given the few vectors identified. In addition, epizoochory is mostly considered non-mutualistic since dispersers do not obtain nutritional rewards. Here, we show a widespread but unknown mutualistic interaction between parrots and plants through epizoochory. Combining our observations with photos from web-sources, we recorded nearly 2000 epizoochory events in 48 countries across five continents, involving 116 parrot species and nearly 100 plant species from 35 families, including both native and non-native species. The viscid pulp of fleshy fruits and anemochorous structures facilitate the adherence of tiny seeds (mean 3.7 × 2.56 mm) on the surface of parrots while feeding, allowing the dispersion of these seeds over long distances (mean = 118.5 m). This parrot-plant mutualism could be important in ecosystem functioning across a wide diversity of environments, also facilitating the spread of exotic plants. Future studies should include parrots for a better understanding of plant dispersal processes and for developing effective conservation actions against habitat loss and biological invasions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/plants10040760 | DOI Listing |
Front Plant Sci
June 2025
State Key Laboratory of Herbage Improvement and Grassland Agro-ecosystems; Key Laboratory of Grassland Livestock Industry Innovation, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs; Engineering Technology Research Center for Ecological Restoration and Utilization of Degraded Grassland in Northwest China,
Introduction: Epizoochorous dispersal of grassland plants by large herbivores is an important way by which grassland plants achieve population expansion over long distances. However, little is known about the maximum distance that seeds can be dispersed by domestic animals under seasonal grazing, which is the most common type of grassland management worldwide, especially in alpine regions.
Methods: To this end, we estimated the distance over which epizoochory dispersal occurs via yaks () for seven common plant species seeds in an alpine meadow under seasonal grazing using a simulated yak-fur seed adhesion test combined with observations of grazing behavior.
Ecology
January 2025
Department of Biology, Graduate School of Science, Kobe University, Kobe, Hyogo, Japan.
Naturwissenschaften
October 2024
Institute of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, 305-8572, Japan.
Colonization of new habitats is a key event in forming current distributions in organisms. It has been speculated that freshwater fish eggs can be dispersed passively by attaching to or egestion from waterbirds that arrive in wetland habitats. Recent research showed that some freshwater fish eggs could be excreted alive from birds and then successfully hatch, but scientific evidence of bird-mediated fish dispersal is still limited to endozoochory (internal transport through a bird's digestive tract).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHistorical resurveys represent a unique opportunity to analyze vegetation dynamics over longer timescales than is typically achievable. Leveraging the oldest historical dataset of vegetation change in the Bavarian Alps, Germany, we address how environmental conditions, vegetation composition, and functional diversity in the calcareous grasslands of the Schachen region have changed across different elevational ranges over an 83-year timeframe. We document changes in regional average temperature and precipitation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcology
October 2024
School of the Environment, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Animals disperse seeds in various ways that affect seed deposition sites and seed survival, ultimately shaping plant species distribution, community composition, and ecosystem structure. Some animal species can disperse seeds through multiple pathways (e.g.
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