4.4 Article

Are Gastropods, Rather than Ants, Important Dispersers of Seeds of Myrmecochorous Forest Herbs?

Journal

AMERICAN NATURALIST
Volume 179, Issue 1, Pages 124-131

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/663195

Keywords

myrmecochory; gastropodochory; Arion; slug; seed dispersal

Funding

  1. DFG [1374, WE 3018/9-1, FI 1246/6-1]
  2. Biodiversity Exploratories project

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Seed dispersal by ants (myrmecochory) is widespread, and seed adaptations to myrmecochory are common, especially in the form of fatty appendices (elaiosomes). In a recent study, slugs were identified as seed dispersers of myrmecochores in a central European beech forest. Here we used 105 beech forest sites to test whether myrmecochore presence and abundance is related to ant or gastropod abundance and whether experimentally exposed seeds are removed by gastropods. Myrmecochorous plant cover was positively related to gastropod abundance but was negatively related to ant abundance. Gastropods were responsible for most seed removal and elaiosome damage, whereas insects (and rodents) played minor roles. These gastropod effects on seeds were independent of region or forest management. We suggest that terrestrial gastropods can generally act as seed dispersers of myrmecochorous plants and even substitute myrmecochory, especially where ants are absent or uncommon.

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