Habitat-dependent fruiting behaviour of an understorey tree,Miconia centrodesma, and tropical treefall gaps as keystone habitats for frugivores in Costa Rica
- 1 November 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Tropical Ecology
- Vol. 6 (4) , 409-420
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s026646740000479x
Abstract
Fruit production by an understorey tree,Miconia centrodesma, was monitored in treefall gaps and under intact canopy in a Costa Rican lowland rain forest. Trees in gaps displayed much less seasonality in fruit production than trees of intact forest sites. For example, ripe fruits were common on gap trees for a six month period (January-June) when few or no trees under intact canopy were in fruit. The frequent and aseasonal fruiting of gap trees demonstrates that they are not constrained by phenological cueing mechanisms; the influence of such cues is overridden by habitat. Trees in gaps also produced larger crops, had more extended fruiting episodes, and fruited more frequently than shaded conspecifics. This level of intraspecific variation in fruiting behaviour suggests that treefall gaps play an important role in determining the reproductive success ofM. centrodesma. A substantial proportion of an individual's lifetime seed output may be produced during the brief period it occupies a gap. In addition, the large and continuous supply of fruits produced in gaps byM. centrodesmaand other understorey plants, may mean that gaps function as ‘keystone habitats’ by providing resident frugivores with fruit during periods of general fruit scarcity.Keywords
This publication has 57 references indexed in Scilit:
- Arrival and Survival in Tropical Treefall GapsEcology, 1989
- Phenological studies of shrub and treelet species in tropical cloud forests of Costa RicaJournal of Tropical Ecology, 1988
- Phenological Variation in the Neotropical Understory Shrub Piper Arielanum: Causes and ConsequencesEcology, 1988
- Frugivory in Some Migrant Tropical Forest Wood WarblersBiotropica, 1981
- Neotropical Forest DynamicsBiotropica, 1980
- Bird Activity and Seed Dispersal of a Tropical Wet Forest TreeEcology, 1977
- Phenological Behavior of Habit and Habitat Classes on Barro Colorado Island (Panama Canal Zone)Biotropica, 1975
- A Case for Selection for Delayed Fruit Maturation in Spondias (Anacardiaceae)Biotropica, 1974
- Relationships between Fruiting Seasons and Seed Dispersal Methods in a Neotropical ForestThe American Naturalist, 1970
- Browse Plants Yield Best in Forest OpeningsThe Journal of Wildlife Management, 1968