4.7 Article

Endozoochorous seed dispersal by Korean water deer (Hydropotes inermis argyropus) in Taehwa Research Forest, South Korea

Journal

GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION
Volume 40, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.gecco.2022.e02325

Keywords

Endozoochory; Forest habitat; Korean water deer; Plant -animal interactions; Taehwa Research Forest

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Endozoochorous seed dispersal by ungulates can facilitate long-distance seed dispersal and result in ecological filtering of plant species. Korean water deer is a potential vector for long-distance seed dispersal in lowland areas of South Korea. The study found that the seed traits dispersed by Korean water deer through endozoochory are consistent with those of lowland areas.
Endozoochorous seed dispersal by ungulates can facilitate the dispersal of seeds over long dis-tances. Endozoochorous seed dispersal can also result in the ecological filtering of plant species by dispersing plant seeds with distinctive traits. The Korean water deer (Hydropotes inermis argyr-opus) is a potential long-distance seed dispersal vector in lowland areas of South Korea. In this study, to test the endozoochorous seed dispersal role of Korean water deer in forested areas, we collected 202 fresh fecal pellet group samples in Taehwa Research Forest, Gwangju City, Gyeonggi Province, South Korea. Additionally, we conducted a vegetation survey to compare the traits of dispersed seeds from feces with the seed traits of flora in the study site. To test whether the composition of species traits dispersed by endozoochory is consistent with that of lowland areas, which consist of forested hills, arable land, and wetlands, we compared the results with a former study conducted in the lowlands. From the seedling emergence method applied to feces, we found a total of 22 species and 115 seedlings. Among 202 fecal pellet groups, 19.8% had at least one germinable seed. Species of forbs, with small-sized seeds (<= 2 mm in length), from open habitat, and seeds without special morphology for dispersal are most frequently dispersed through Korean water deer endozoochory. These traits were consistent with the former endo-zoochory study conducted in a lowland area, irrespective of the different available flora. Therefore, we suggest that deer can potentially disperse seeds with the aforementioned traits to forest plant communities, acting as a consistent ecological filter through endozoochory.

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