机构地区:[1]Primate Research Institute,Kyoto University [2]Faculty of Science,Kagoshima University
出 处:《Forestry Studies in China》2010年第4期184-192,共9页中国林学(英文版)
基 金:financed by the Cooperation Research Program of KUPRI,the MEXT Grant-in-Aid for JSPS Fellows,the 21st Century COE Program,the Global COE Program "Formation of a Strategic Base for Biodiversity and Evolutionary Research:from Genome to Ecosystem"
摘 要:Quantification of fruit fall is the only way to compare fruit food availability among different studies. This study aims to reveal the general characteristics of fruit fall in temperate forests, which should offer indispensable information for using fruit fall data as food availability for frugivores. Fruit fall in three warm-temperate and two cool-temperate forests on Yakushima, an island in southwestern Japan, were studied for two years in one cool-temperate plot of 50 m × 50 m in size and for four years in other plots of 100 m × 50 m in size. The elevations of the plots ranged 170-1200 m a.s.1. Fruit fall was highest in the lowland forests (599 and 564 DW kg·ha^-1·year^-1 and lowest in the mid-elevation forest (198 DW kg·ha^-1·year^-1). Fleshy fruits and food-fruits for Japanese macaques constituted 3-37% and 4-87% of the total fruit fall, respectively. When only fleshy-fruit fall was compared, it was higher in the western lowland forest (222 DW kg.ha^-1.year^-1) than in any other forests (9-66 DW kg-ha^-1.year^-1). The pulp of fleshy fruits, presumably the edible parts for frugivores, was only 1.1-12.7% of the total fi ait fall. The edible parts for Japanese macaques constituted 3-54% of the fruit fall, showing a high value where acorns are abundant. Half of the fruit-fall biomass consisted of only one or two non- fleshy-fruited species, which are usually dominant in many other temperate forests, such as Quercus and conifers. These variations agreed with the variations in occurrence of frugivorous (such as Japanese macaques).Quantification of fruit fall is the only way to compare fruit food availability among different studies. This study aims to reveal the general characteristics of fruit fall in temperate forests, which should offer indispensable information for using fruit fall data as food availability for frugivores. Fruit fall in three warm-temperate and two cool-temperate forests on Yakushima, an island in southwestern Japan, were studied for two years in one cool-temperate plot of 50 m × 50 m in size and for four years in other plots of 100 m × 50 m in size. The elevations of the plots ranged 170-1200 m a.s.1. Fruit fall was highest in the lowland forests (599 and 564 DW kg·ha^-1·year^-1 and lowest in the mid-elevation forest (198 DW kg·ha^-1·year^-1). Fleshy fruits and food-fruits for Japanese macaques constituted 3-37% and 4-87% of the total fruit fall, respectively. When only fleshy-fruit fall was compared, it was higher in the western lowland forest (222 DW kg.ha^-1.year^-1) than in any other forests (9-66 DW kg-ha^-1.year^-1). The pulp of fleshy fruits, presumably the edible parts for frugivores, was only 1.1-12.7% of the total fi ait fall. The edible parts for Japanese macaques constituted 3-54% of the fruit fall, showing a high value where acorns are abundant. Half of the fruit-fall biomass consisted of only one or two non- fleshy-fruited species, which are usually dominant in many other temperate forests, such as Quercus and conifers. These variations agreed with the variations in occurrence of frugivorous (such as Japanese macaques).
关 键 词:fleshy fruits FRUGIVORE Japanese macaque temperate forest
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