Abstract

We studied the dispersal system of the tree Commiphora guillaumini (Burseraceae) in a dry deciduous forest of western Madagascar by measuring tree visitation, fruit consumption, and seed dispersal rates of primary dispersers and the modification of the primary seed shadow by secondary dispersers. The seed dispersal system of C. guillaumini is unusually simple because primary seed dispersal and secondary seed dispersal are each effectively carried out by a single species: primary dispersal by the Lesser Vasa Parrot, Coracopsis nigra, and secondary dispersal by the ant Aphaenogaster swammerdami. The quality of seed dispersal by each disperser was measured by comparing seed distributions with seedling distributions. Although parrots dispersed only 7.9 ± 6.0% (mean ± 1 sd) of the seeds away from the crown, these seeds had a probability of becoming established as seedlings that was 35.4 times higher than that of seeds that were dropped beneath the crown or that simply fell from the crown. Ants secondarily disp...

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