1. Local people enhance our understanding of Afrotropical frugivory networks.
- Author
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Durand-Bessart, Clémentine, Akomo-Okoue, Etienne François, Ebang Ella, Ghislain Wilfried, Porcher, Vincent, Bitome Essono, Paul Yannick, Bretagnolle, François, and Fontaine, Colin
- Subjects
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FOREST dynamics , *LOCAL knowledge , *TROPICAL forests , *SEED size , *ANIMAL species , *DEAD trees - Abstract
Afrotropical forests are undergoing massive change caused by defaunation, i.e., the human-induced decline of animal species, 1 most of which are frugivorous species. 1,2,3 Frugivores' depletion and their functional disappearance are expected to cascade on tree dispersal and forest structure via interaction networks, 4,5,6,7 as the majority of tree species depend on frugivores for their dispersal. 8 However, frugivory networks remain largely unknown, especially in Afrotropical areas, 9,10,11 which considerably limits our ability to predict changes in forest dynamics and structures using network analysis. 12,13,14,15 While the academic workforce may be inadequate to fill this knowledge gap before it is too late, local ecological knowledge appears as a valuable source of ecological information and could significantly contribute to our understanding of such crucial interactions for tropical forests. 16,17,18,19,20,21 To investigate potential synergies between local ecological knowledge and academic knowledge, 20,21 we compiled frugivory interactions linking 286 trees to 100 frugivore species from the academic literature and local ecological knowledge coming from interviews of Gabonese forest-dependent people. Here, we showed that local ecological knowledge on frugivory interactions was substantial and original, with 39% of these interactions unknown by science. We demonstrated that combining academic and local ecological knowledge affects the functional relationship linking frugivore body mass to seed size, as well as the network structure. Our results highlight the benefits of bridging knowledge systems between academics and local communities for a better understanding of the functioning and response to perturbations of Afrotropical forests. • Local ecological knowledge increase by 39% the number of known frugivory interactions • Women have specific local ecological knowledge on frugivory interactions • Animals consume smaller fruits when local ecological knowledge is accounted for Frugivory is a key ecological interaction to maintain biodiversity in tropical forests. Comparing what is known from academic studies and from local people living in these forests, Durand-Bessart et al. highlight tremendous local ecological knowledge, complementary to the academic one, that changes our understanding of such networks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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