Abstract

Information on seed dispersal distances is critical for understanding plant species persistence in habitat fragments and vegetation recovery when disturbance is reduced. In the degraded upland landscape of Hong Kong (22°N), the bulbuls Pycnonotus sinensis and P. jocosus are responsible for a large proportion of seed movements. Dispersal distances were estimated from gut passage times (GPTs) and movement patterns determined by radio-telemetry. Estimates were also made for the hwamei, Garrulax canorus. Seven adult P. sinensis and four adult G. canorus were tracked in winter, and six juvenile P. sinensis, three juvenile P. jocosus and two juvenile G. canorus in summer. GPTs were 5–122 min in the bulbuls and 18–61 min in the hwamei. Most 10-min movements were 1300 m for both bulbuls and 940 m for the hwamei. Displacement-time graphs generally levelled off rapidly, with median displacements 1 km for all bulbuls. Estimated dispersal distances were shorter for hwameis. The radio-telemetry results were supplemented by 49 h of visual observations, during which 1,510 bird movements across open areas were observed, 64% by P. sinensis, 13% by P. jocosus, and 0.5% by G. canorus. The bulbuls, therefore, connect habitat fragments in upland Hong Kong for plants with fruits within their maximum gape width.

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