Seed rain in a tropical dry forest and adjacent home gardens in the Yucatan

Tropical home gardens are widely recognized as reservoirs of biodiversity. Typically, Maya home gardens have an area of intensive management and one of extensive management. In the latter, some wild plant species may find safe sites for establishment, since they exhibit a high degree of similarity (...

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Autores: G. Jashui Villicaña Hernández, DANIELA ALEJANDRA MARTINEZ NATAREN, RICARDO XAVIER ALVAREZ ESPINO, MIGUEL ANGEL MUNGUIA ROSAS
Tipo de documento: artigo
Estado:Versão publicada
Data de publicação:2020
País:México
Recursos:Centro de Investigación Científica de Yucatán
Repositório:Repositorio Institucional CICY
Idioma:inglês
OAI Identifier:oai:cicy.repositorioinstitucional.mx:1003/1935
Acesso em linha:http://cicy.repositorioinstitucional.mx/jspui/handle/1003/1935
Access Level:Acceso aberto
Palavra-chave:info:eu-repo/classification/Autores/FOREST REGENERATION
info:eu-repo/classification/Autores/NUCLEATION
info:eu-repo/classification/Autores/SEED DISPERSAL
info:eu-repo/classification/Autores/TRADITIONAL AGROECOSYSTEM
info:eu-repo/classification/Autores/PLANT MANAGEMENT
info:eu-repo/classification/Autores/YUCATAN PENINSULA
info:eu-repo/classification/cti/2
info:eu-repo/classification/cti/24
info:eu-repo/classification/cti/2417
info:eu-repo/classification/cti/241713
Descrição
Resumo:Tropical home gardens are widely recognized as reservoirs of biodiversity. Typically, Maya home gardens have an area of intensive management and one of extensive management. In the latter, some wild plant species may find safe sites for establishment, since they exhibit a high degree of similarity (in terms in plant species composition) to the surrounding forest and are dominated by plants with fleshy fruit. Therefore, this may attract frugivorous animals, which in turn may generate some seed rain. The objective of our study was to compare seed rain in the extensively managed areas of home gardens and in the surrounding forest during the fruiting peak in a rural landscape in the Yucatan. We assessed seed rain using seed traps in two habitats: the extensively managed areas of home gardens and an adjacent tropical forest. Seed rain was more abundant, denser and more diverse in the home gardens than in the adjacent forest. Approximately one quarter of the seeds recorded are from species shared between the forest and home gardens, suggesting there is notable seed exchange between these habitats. Also 50% of the seed species exclusively found in home gardens are allochthonous, likely rare species from the forest. In general, our results suggest that home gardens—particularly their extensively managed areas—are effective seed traps for forest species.