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Seed dispersal kernel of the largest surviving megaherbivore—the African savanna elephant
by
Bond, William J.
, Henley, Michelle
, Bunney, Katherine
in
African savanna elephant
/ Australia
/ digestive system
/ dispersal distance
/ dispersal kernel
/ Elephantidae
/ Europe
/ fauna
/ forests
/ Fruits
/ Loxodonta africana
/ Loxodonta africana africana
/ maximum gut passage time
/ mechanistic model
/ mechanistic models
/ megafaunal fruit
/ megaherbivore
/ National parks
/ North America
/ Plant diversity
/ Plant species
/ Pleistocene
/ Pleistocene megafauna
/ Savannahs
/ savannas
/ Seed dispersal
/ Seeds
/ South America
/ Telemetry
/ trees
/ vertebrates
2017
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Seed dispersal kernel of the largest surviving megaherbivore—the African savanna elephant
by
Bond, William J.
, Henley, Michelle
, Bunney, Katherine
in
African savanna elephant
/ Australia
/ digestive system
/ dispersal distance
/ dispersal kernel
/ Elephantidae
/ Europe
/ fauna
/ forests
/ Fruits
/ Loxodonta africana
/ Loxodonta africana africana
/ maximum gut passage time
/ mechanistic model
/ mechanistic models
/ megafaunal fruit
/ megaherbivore
/ National parks
/ North America
/ Plant diversity
/ Plant species
/ Pleistocene
/ Pleistocene megafauna
/ Savannahs
/ savannas
/ Seed dispersal
/ Seeds
/ South America
/ Telemetry
/ trees
/ vertebrates
2017
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Seed dispersal kernel of the largest surviving megaherbivore—the African savanna elephant
by
Bond, William J.
, Henley, Michelle
, Bunney, Katherine
in
African savanna elephant
/ Australia
/ digestive system
/ dispersal distance
/ dispersal kernel
/ Elephantidae
/ Europe
/ fauna
/ forests
/ Fruits
/ Loxodonta africana
/ Loxodonta africana africana
/ maximum gut passage time
/ mechanistic model
/ mechanistic models
/ megafaunal fruit
/ megaherbivore
/ National parks
/ North America
/ Plant diversity
/ Plant species
/ Pleistocene
/ Pleistocene megafauna
/ Savannahs
/ savannas
/ Seed dispersal
/ Seeds
/ South America
/ Telemetry
/ trees
/ vertebrates
2017
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Seed dispersal kernel of the largest surviving megaherbivore—the African savanna elephant
Journal Article
Seed dispersal kernel of the largest surviving megaherbivore—the African savanna elephant
2017
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Overview
Owing to the late Pleistocene extinctions, the megafauna of Europe, Australia and the Americas disappeared, and with them the dispersal service they offered megafaunal fruit. The African savanna elephant, the largest remaining megaherbivore, offers valuable insights into the seed dispersal services provided by extinct megafauna in prehistoric times. Elephant seed dispersal studies have for the most part concentrated on African and Asian forest elephants. African savanna elephants are morphologically distinct from their forest counterparts. Like the forest elephants they consume large quantities of fruit from a large number of tree species. Despite this little is known of the savanna trees that rely on elephants for their dispersal or the spatial scale at which these seeds are dispersed. We combined information from feeding trials conducted on four park elephants with field telemetry data from 38 collared elephants collected over an 8-year period in APNR/Kruger National Park to assess the seed dispersal service provided by savanna elephants. This study provides the first detailed account of the spatial scale at which African savanna elephants disperse seeds. Our mechanistic model predicts that 50 percent of seeds are carried over 2.5 km, and distances up to 65 km are achievable in maximum gut passage time. These findings suggest the savanna elephant as the longest distance terrestrial vertebrate disperser yet investigated. Maintaining their ecological role as a seed disperser may prove a significant factor in the conservation of large-fruited tree diversity within the savannas. These results suggest that extinct megafauna offered a functionally unique dispersal service to megafaunal fruit.
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