Abstract

Woody encroachment threatens prairie ecosystems globally, and thus understanding the mechanisms that facilitate woody encroachment is of critical importance. Coastal tallgrass prairies along the Gulf Coast of the US are currently threatened by the spread of several species of woody plants. We studied a coastal tallgrass prairie in Texas, USA, to determine if existing woody structure increased the supply of seeds from woody plants via dispersal by birds. Specifically, we determined if (i) more seedlings of an invasive tree (Tridacia sebifera) are present surrounding a native woody plant (Myrica cerifera); (ii) wooden perches increase the quantity of seeds dispersed to a grassland; and (iii) perches alter the composition of the seed rain seasonally in prairie habitats with differing amounts of native and invasive woody vegetation, both underneath and away from artificial wooden perches. More T. sebifera seedlings were found within M. cerifera patches than in graminoid‐dominated areas. Although perches did not affect the total number of seeds, perches changed the composition of seed rain to be less dominated by grasses and forbs. Specifically, 20–30 times as many seeds of two invasive species of woody plants were found underneath perches independent of background vegetation, especially during months when seed rain was highest. These results suggest that existing woody structure in a grassland can promote further woody encroachment by enhancing seed dispersal by birds. This finding argues for management to reduce woody plant abundance before exotic plants set seeds and argues against the use of artificial perches as a restoration technique in grasslands threatened by woody species.

Highlights

  • The dominance of native and invasive woody species in historically graminoid-­dominated systems has become more prevalent across the planet (Briggs et al, 2005; Eldridge et al, 2011; Stevens, Lehmann, Murphy, & Durigan, 2017), posing a further threat to globally imperiled grassland ecosystems (Hoekstra, Boucher, Ricketts, & Roberts, 2005)

  • This issue is of practical relevance because some authors have promoted the idea of using artificial perches to attract birds and increase seed rain into restoration projects to increase plant diversity (Guidetti, Amico, Dardanelli, & Rodriguez-­ Cabal, 2016)—this approach might unwittingly promote the spread of problematic exotic, avian-­dispersed plants in grasslands

  • We tested three specific hypotheses: (1) T. sebifera seedlings are more abundant around thickets of M. cerifera compared to graminoid-­ dominated areas; (2) the dispersal of plant seeds, especially those of woody plants that are bird dispersed, is higher under versus away from artificial wooden perches; (3) composition of seeds being dispersed differs over time between perch treatments and among habitats with different types of vegetation; dispersal should be higher in areas already dominated by woody vegetation that birds may be actively using compared to graminoid-­dominated areas

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

The dominance of native and invasive woody species in historically graminoid-­dominated systems has become more prevalent across the planet (Briggs et al, 2005; Eldridge et al, 2011; Stevens, Lehmann, Murphy, & Durigan, 2017), posing a further threat to globally imperiled grassland ecosystems (Hoekstra, Boucher, Ricketts, & Roberts, 2005). We tested three specific hypotheses: (1) T. sebifera seedlings are more abundant around thickets of M. cerifera compared to graminoid-­ dominated areas; (2) the dispersal of plant seeds, especially those of woody plants that are bird dispersed, is higher under versus away from artificial wooden perches; (3) composition of seeds being dispersed differs over time between perch treatments and among habitats with different types of vegetation (graminoid dominated, shrub dominated, and T. sebifera dominated); dispersal should be higher in areas already dominated by woody vegetation that birds may be actively using compared to graminoid-­dominated areas

| METHODS
| DISCUSSION
Findings
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
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