Interactions etween ants, fruits and seeds in the cerrado : the role of ants in the biology of seeds and seedlings / Interações entre formigas, frutos e sementes em solo de cerrado : o papel de formigas na biologia de sementes e plantulas

AUTOR(ES)
DATA DE PUBLICAÇÃO

2007

RESUMO

Our knowledge about seed dispersal systems has been improved considerably in the last few years. An increasing number of studies has shown that the process of plant regeneration is often much more complex than we realize, including several different agents across subsequent steps of seed dispersal. For instance, ants may reshape the seed shadow after seeds fall to the ground, and this may influence the transition probabilities from seed to the seedling stage in plant recruitment. Here we report data showing that ants are important agents of secondary seed dispersal in the largest South American savanna, the cerrado. Ants interacted with fallen diaspores of many plants primarily dispersed by vertebrate frugivores. Ants often cleaned the seeds from fruit matter, what increased seed germination. The seeds of Erythroxylum pelleterianum (Erythroxylaceae), Xylopia aromatica (Annonaceae) and Miconia rubiginosa (Melastomataceae) are primarily dispersed by birds, but most fruits fall to the ground under the parent tree. Ants removed a considerable number of fallen diaspores of these plants, and provided directed dispersal to nutrient-enriched microsites where seedling survival was increased, as shown for E. pelleterianum. However, this benefit sometimes is attained at the cost of significant seed loss to granivorous ants, as in the case of Xylopia aromatica. Birds are likely responsible for long-distance dispersal and colonization of new patches, while ants reshape the seed shadow at a finer scale, delivering seeds to specific sites where seedling survival is more likely. Although most ant taxa were generalist in relation to diaspore traits, leaf-cutter ants showed a preference pattern for some diaspores, particularly carbohydrate-rich ones. We suggest that such preference may be driven by the chemically-protected plant leaves of the cerrado, which would constrain leaf-cutter ants to rely on fleshy fruits for fungus culturing inside their nests. Finally, we showed that ant-diaspore interactions are susceptible to edge effects, which decrease benefits obtained by plants secondarily dispersed by ants. This information is particularly relevant, since the cerrado is currently being converted to cropland at an alarming rate, and so far edge effects had not been recognized in the cerrado.

ASSUNTO(S)

animal-plant relationships sementes - dispersão ants cerrados formiga - ecologia cerrados interação animal-planta

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