Endozoochory is an important form of seed dispersal and as such plays a fundamental role in plant population and community ecology. This is especially true in the Subtropical Thicket biome where many plant species are adapted for endozoochory. Endozoochorous seed dispersal is carried out by a wide range of thicket fauna, but changes in the faunal assemblage associated with transformed thicket threatens to disrupt the process of endozoochorous seed dispersal and in turn the regeneration dynamics of thicket plants. Outside of conservation areas, indigenous seed dispersers are often replaced by domestic species, such as goats, which are hypothesized to differ in their seed dispersal efficiencies. The dispersal efficiencies of important thicket seed dispersers that occur in transformed and untransformed thicket were therefore investigated. The influence of gut morphologyphysiology on seed gut passage time, seed mortality and germination in animal species representing different digestive models was measured, as well as the role of black-backed jackal in thicket plant seed dispersal. Black-backed jackal were found to disperse the seeds of few thicket plant species and are therefore not considered important thicket seed dispersers under the climatic conditions prevailing during the study. The average gut passage time of seeds was found to differ significantly between birds and mammals, but not between elephants (hindgut fermentor), goats (ruminant) and pigs (omnivore, foregut fermentor) as was expected considering the differences in their digestive morphology. A significantly shorter gut passage of large seeds compared with small seeds was observed in goats, due to the regurgitation of larger seeds. Seed regurgitation in ruminants may prove to be an important factor contributing to their quality as seed dispersers in transformed thicket. The mortality of seeds was significantly higher in goats than in elephants, probably due to the efficient digestion associated with ruminants. The effect of gut passage on seed germination was not consistent and varied between animal species and across different thicket plant species. It was concluded that seed dispersers that occur in transformed and untransformed thicket differ in their seed dispersal efficiency due, in part, to differences in the nature of their digestive tracts. This has important implications for the process of seed dispersal in thicket, and the rehabilitation of degraded thicket vegetation.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:nmmu/vital:10714 |
Date | January 2007 |
Creators | Davis, Shavaughn |
Publisher | Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, Faculty of Science |
Source Sets | South African National ETD Portal |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis, Masters, MSc |
Format | iv, 105 pages, pdf |
Rights | Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University |
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