Back to Search Start Over

Long‐term monitoring of seed dispersal by Asian elephants in a Sundaland rainforest.

Authors :
Tan, Wei Harn
Hii, Adeline
Solana‐Mena, Alicia
Wong, Ee Phin
Loke, Vivienne P. W.
Tan, Ange S. L.
Kromann‐Clausen, Anders
Hii, Ning
bin Pura, Param
bin Tunil, Muhamad Tauhid
A/L Din, Sudin
Chin, Chiew Foan
Campos‐Arceiz, Ahimsa
Source :
Biotropica; Mar2021, Vol. 53 Issue 2, p453-465, 13p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) have inhabited almost all forests in tropical Asia until recently, yet little is known about their role in ecological processes, particularly in the Sundaic forests of South‐East Asia. These forests are peculiar in their phenology, with supra‐annual and highly irregular episodes of mast fruiting. Here, we present a long‐term (6‐year) monitoring of the seeds dispersed by elephants in dipterocarp forests of northern Peninsular Malaysia. We conducted monthly dung surveys at two mineral licks (11.3 km apart) frequently visited by elephants. Additionally, we recorded haphazard observations of seeds and seedlings in elephant dung at other locations. We recorded a minimum of 48 morphospecies from at least 25 plant families dispersed by elephants. Elephant seed dispersal was very heterogenous in space, with only 30.3% of the morphospecies dispersed at both sites (Jaccard dissimilarity index = 0.48). Temporally, elephants dispersed seeds in sporadic pulses of abundance and diversity, without any apparent seasonality (seeds appeared in 19.1% of 1,284 dung piles and 57.1% of the 63 months in which we found dung) and with long periods without any seed being dispersed. Nearly half (48%) of the plants dispersed by elephants belong to a megafaunal dispersal syndrome. Our long‐term approach allowed us to unravel an important aspect of Asian elephants' role and effectiveness in the seed dispersal cycle. Sundaland's forests are undergoing a rapid loss of their previously common megaherbivores (rhinos and elephants), with profound and long‐term consequences for ecosystem functioning. Abstract in Malay is available with online material. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00063606
Volume :
53
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Biotropica
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
149432976
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/btp.12889