Abstract

Dispersal has important ecological and evolutionary consequences for populations, but understanding the role of specific traits in dispersal can be difficult and requires careful experimentation. Moreover, understanding how humans alter dispersal is an important question, especially on oceanic islands where anthropogenic disturbance through species introductions can dramatically alter native ecosystems.In this study, we investigated the functional role of spines in seed dispersal of the plant caltrop (Tribulus cistoides L., Zygophyllaceae) by anthropogenic dispersal agents. We also tested whether humans or wildlife are more important seed dispersers of T. cistoides on the Galápagos. Tribulus cistoides is found on tropical mainland and oceanic island habitats. The dispersal structure of T. cistoides is called a mericarp, and they are typically protected by one pair of upper spines and a second pair of lower spines, but the presence and size of spines varies within and between populations. On the Galápagos, the upper and lower spines protect mericarps from seed predation by Darwin's finches. We tested whether spines play a dual role in dispersal by factorially manipulating the presence/absence of the upper and lower spines to simulate natural variation in mericarp morphology.The upper spines greatly facilitated seed dispersal, whereas the lower spines had no discernible effect on dispersal. The presence of upper spines increased dispersal rate on shoes by pedestrians 23‐fold, on fabrics (e.g., towels) and cars by nearly twofold, and the presence of upper spines increased dispersal distance by cars sixfold. When comparing dispersal rates in habitats with high (roads and foot paths) versus low (arid forest) anthropogenic activity, dispersal rates were demonstrably higher in the habitats with more human activity.These results have important implications for understanding the ecology and evolution of plant dispersal in the Anthropocene. Spines on the fruits of T. cistoides play important functional roles in anthropogenic dispersal, whereas native and introduced wildlife plays a minor role in dispersal on inhabited islands of the Galápagos. Our results imply that seed predators and humans are jointly shaping the ecology and evolution of contemporary populations of T. cistoides on the Galápagos.

Highlights

  • Dispersal plays an essential biological function for all organisms, with important consequences for the ecological success and evolution of populations (Fenner, 1985; Levin, Muller-Landau, Nathan, & Chave, 2003)

  • We investigated the functional role of spines in seed dispersal of the plant caltrop (Tribulus cistoides L., Zygophyllaceae) by anthropogenic dispersal agents

  • Spines on the fruits of T. cistoides play important functional roles in anthropogenic dispersal, whereas native and introduced wildlife plays a minor role in dispersal on inhabited islands of the

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Dispersal plays an essential biological function for all organisms, with important consequences for the ecological success and evolution of populations (Fenner, 1985; Levin, Muller-Landau, Nathan, & Chave, 2003). We studied caltrop (Tribulus cistoides, Zygophyllaceae) on the Galápagos Islands This species is well known as an agent of natural selection on beak morphology of Darwin's finches, which drives rapid adaptive evolution of the medium ground finch (Geospiza fortis) during extended dry periods (Grant & Grant, 2014). A recent study showed that spines act as an antipredator defence against three Darwin's finch species (G. fortis, G. magnirostris, G. conirostris), whereby upper and lower spines reduce seed predation (Carvajal-Endara et al, 2020). This selection varied in space and time depending on climatic variation and the presence of large-beaked finch species (G. magnirostris and G. conirostris). What are the relative roles of anthropogenic versus nonanthropogenic dispersal of Tribulus seeds on the Galápagos? If wildlife are the most important dispersers, we expect higher dispersal rates in natural areas where humans seldom visit

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Findings
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