0000000000326399
AUTHOR
Barbara Fruth
Ecological services performed by the bonobo (Pan paniscus): seed dispersal effectiveness in tropical forest.
Abstract:Survival of Afrotropical primary forests depends not only on habitat protection but also on the protection of animal species such as frugivorous primates, recognized as the most important seed dispersers for many plants. Here we investigate seed-dispersal services by the bonobo (Pan paniscus) in an evergreen lowland tropical rain forest of the Congo Basin. In the long-term research site of LuiKotale, we investigated food habits and seed processing based on 22 mo of behavioural observation, seed trial experiment and long-term daily GPS tracking of a habituated ape community. Bonobos were mainly frugivores (66% of all feeding sessions), spending about 3.5 h d−1swallowing seeds that w…
Doom of the elephant-dependent trees in a Congo tropical forest.
9 pages; International audience; In an evergreen lowland rain forest of the Cuvette Centrale, DR Congo, at the LuiKotale Max-Planck research site, forest elephants (Loxodonta cyclotis) are close to extinction. Between January 2009 and June 2011 we investigated the influence of elephant decline on sustainability of elephant-dispersed tree populations. For this, we explored how trees with the megafaunal syndrome reproduce without seed dispersal by elephants and how does this affect the demography and spatial distribution of these tree species. We studied alternative partners for functional replacement of the elephant. Overall, 18 tree species presenting the megafaunal syndrome were identified…
The Bonobo-DialiumPositive Interactions: Seed Dispersal Mutualism
A positive interaction is any interaction between individuals of the same or different species (mutualism) that provides a benefit to both partners such as increased fitness. Here we focus on seed dispersal mutualism between an animal (bonobo, Pan paniscus) and a plant (velvet tamarind trees, Dialium spp.). In the LuiKotale rainforest southwest of Salonga National Park, Democratic Republic of Congo, seven species of the genus Dialium account for 29.3% of all trees. Dialium is thus the dominant genus in this forest. Dialium fruits make up a large proportion of the diet of a habituated bonobo community in this forest. During the 6 months of the fruiting season, more than half of the bonobos' …
Artificial germination activation of Dialium corbisieri by imitation of ecological process.
11 pages; International audience; Species of the gender Dialium commonly are trees found in Central African rainforests. They produce tasty sugary fruits, feeding numerous frugivores, but are, despite their valuable nutritional value, rarely exploited by humans. A potential reason for this could be the complexity of symbiotic dependence between trees and pollinators, germination activators, and dispersers causing problems in ancestral and contemporary domestication. We investigated Dialium corbisieri reproduction in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Bandundu Province. Here we give a key for an artificial activation of germination of these trees ecologically adapted to the digestive syst…
Bush pig (Potamochoerus porcus) seed predation of bush mango (Irvingia gabonensis) and other plant species in Democratic Republic of Congo.
4 pages; International audience
Can fruiting plants control animal behaviour and seed dispersal distance?
In an Afrotropical forest, we tested the hypothesis that fleshy-fruit plants with interspecific dif-ferences in fruit quality and quantity affect ranging behaviour of their seed dispersal vector. Iffruiting plants could affect their dispersal vector, the plants also affect their seed dispersal distanceand eventually their plant population biology. From 2007 to 2011, we measured seed transportby georeference daily bonobo group movements via GPS. Seed dispersal distance was estimatedwith mechanistic model, using 1200 georeferenced dispersal events and the average seed transittime through bonobo (24.00 h). We compared dissemination for eight plant species that deal withthis trade-off: attracti…