Seed Size, Not Dispersal Syndrome, Determines Potential for Spread of Ricefield Weeds by Gulls
Metadatos
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MDPI
Materia
Endozoochory Lesser black-backed gull Larus fuscus Dry-fruited seeds Fleshy-fruited seeds Dispersal syndromes
Fecha
2023-03-27Referencia bibliográfica
Peralta-Sánchez, J.M.; Ansotegui, A.; Hortas, F.; Redón, S.; Martín-Vélez, V.; Green, A.J.; Navarro-Ramos, M.J.; Lovas-Kiss, A.; Sánchez, M.I. Seed Size, Not Dispersal Syndrome, Determines Potential for Spread of Ricefield Weeds by Gulls. Plants 2023, 12, 1470. [https://doi.org/10.3390/plants12071470]
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation CGL2016-76067-P, PID2020-112774GB- I00/AEI/10.13039/501100011033; CGL2016-76067-P (AEI/FEDER, EU); European Social Fund and Junta de Andalucía (Talento Doctores DOC_01221)Resumen
Recent field data suggest that migratory gulls disperse many rice field weeds by gut
passage (endozoochory), most of which are dry fruited and widely assumed to have no long-distance
dispersal mechanisms, except via human activity. We investigated this mechanism with a feeding
experiment, in which seeds of five common rice field weeds (in order of increasing seed size: Juncus
bufonius, Cyperus difformis, Polypogon monspeliensis, Amaranthus retroflexus, and the fleshy-fruited
Solanum nigrum) were fed to seven individuals of lesser black-backed gulls Larus fuscus held in
captivity. We quantified seed survival after collecting faeces at intervals for 33 h after ingestion, then
extracting intact seeds and running germination tests, which were also conducted for control seeds.
All five species showed high seed survival after gut passage, of >70%. Gut retention times averaged
2–4 h, but maxima exceeded 23 h for all species. Germinability after gut passage was 16–54%, and
gut passage accelerated germination in J. bufonius and S. nigrum, but slowed it down in the other
species. All species had lower germinability after gut passage compared to control seeds (likely
due to stratification prior to the experiment), but the loss of germinability was higher in smaller
seeds. There was no evidence that the different dispersal syndromes assigned to the five species
(endozoochory, epizoochory or barochory) had any influence on our results. In contrast, mean gut
retention time was strongly and positively related to seed size, likely because small seeds pass more
quickly from the gizzard into the intestines. Non-classical endozoochory of dry-fruited seeds by
waterbirds is a major but overlooked mechanism for potential long-distance dispersal, and more
research into this process is likely essential for effective weed management.