Palm harvesting affects seed predation of Euterpe edulis, a threatened palm of the Brazilian Atlantic forest

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Abstract

The palm tree Euterpe edulis is endemic to the Atlantic Forest, where it constitutes an economically important forest product. The often unplanned and illegal harvesting of palm hearts has led to drastic reductions in the populations of E. edulis in many areas where this palm used to be the dominant understorey tree species. We investigated the effects of harvesting on seed and seedling predation of E. edulis. We tested the predictions of the dominance-predation hypothesis according to which predator satiation leads to an inverse relationship between the amount of predation and the dominance of a tree species. During two consecutive years, seeds were set experimentally on an unharvested (> 250 adult palms/ha) and a neighboring harvested site (few, if any, adult palms) located in the Atlantic Forest of SE Brazil. Seedling mortality was studied at both sites for a six-month period in each of two consecutive years. Seed predation caused by rodents was higher at the harvested site, while insects caused more damage to seeds placed at the unharvested site. The proportion of seeds preyed upon by rodents varied annually, while insect predation did not. Seedling mortality did not differ between harvested and unharvested sites. The dominance-predation hypothesis was confirmed for generalist rodent seed predators, but not for specialist insect predators. This result shows that densitydependent mortality, not only at the individual level but also at the population-level scale, is a function of the class of predators and their types of foraging behavior.

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Pizo, M. A., & Vieira, E. M. (2004). Palm harvesting affects seed predation of Euterpe edulis, a threatened palm of the Brazilian Atlantic forest. Brazilian Journal of Biology, 64(3B), 669–676. https://doi.org/10.1590/s1519-69842004000400015

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