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Abstract of a paper based on work funded
at least in part by the Australian Flora Foundation
Wurm, P. A. S.
School of Biological Sciences, Northern Territory University, Darwin,
N.T. 0909, Australia.
A surplus of seeds: high rates of post-dispersal seed predation
in a flooded grassland in monsoonal Australia.
Australian Journal of Ecology. 1998. 23: 385-392
CAB Abstract 980709449
Abstract
Oryza meridionalis is an annual emergent wetland grass which
produces between 26 and 260 kg seeds ha-1 annually. Seed shed occurs at
the end of the wet season, when the plains are usually still partially
flooded. The juvenile recruitment of key native vertebrate species, such
as the Magpie Goose (Anseranas semipalmata) and the Dusky Plains
Rat (Rattus colletti), coincides with seed shed. This study investigated
predation of O. meridionalis seeds at two sites on the South
Alligator River floodplain in monsoonal Australia. The effects of inundation
and the presence of a background density of seeds on seed removal were
investigated by stratified sampling with respect to position down the
topographic slope, to include the 'dry' floodplain margin, 'damp' Oryza
zone, and 'flooded' Oryza zone. The effect of seed lot size on
the proportion of seed removed was also investigated, and exclosures were
used to identify the principal predator group. The proportion of seeds
removed was not affected by the presence/absence of a background of seeds
nor the number of seeds placed in experimental 'lots'. The majority of
seeds (75%) was consumed by vertebrate predators (most likely the abundant
Dusky Plains Rat). Inundation afforded some protection from predation.
Despite high losses of seeds exposed to predators, O. meridionalis
is an abundant and widespread species on these floodplains, possibly because
of the protection from predation afforded by inundation to those seeds
which are shed into the water column. It is likely that there is a complex
interaction between topography, rainfall and predator and prey relationships,
which ultimately determines the importance of seed removal for the maintenance
of populations of O. meridionalis. These high losses of seeds
to predation have implications for wetland rehabilitation where seed broadcasting
is proposed.
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