Abstract

Myrmecochores are plants with seeds adapted for ant dispersal. This specialized dispersal syndrome may provide Erythronium americanum seeds with protection from predators within the eastern deciduous forests. To determine the adaptive significance of myrmecochory in E. americanum, seed removal rates and seed predation in relation to seed release date and location along the Potomac River in Langley, Virginia, were examined. The number of seeds removed from four exclosure treatments were monitored two times in 1992 and three times in 1993 within floodplain and hilltop populations of E. americanum. Overall, seed removal was greatest from control depots, and E. americanum seeds were removed at nearly the same rate from predator‐exclusion depots, indicating that removal from open depots is largely due to ant removal. Ants removed significantly more seeds than predators in the first 48 h of seed exposure and could potentially remove all E. americanum seeds before nightfall. Aphaenogaster rudis was identified as the primary disperser of E. americanum. Seeds placed in depots after the natural seed release period were discovered more quickly and removed by ants at a significantly higher rate than seeds released at the natural date. These results suggest that ant dispersal of E. americanum seeds reduces the likelihood of seed predation.

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