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Journal ArticleDOI

Seed dispersal and the holocene migration of woodland herbs

TLDR
In this paper, the authors examined the long-term spread of the understory herb Asarum canadense by ants and found that the largest distance ants are known to move the seeds of any woodland herb is up to 35 m.
Abstract
The distribution of many woodland herbs extends 1000-2000 km in a north- south direction, yet the majority of these species grow clonally, have little recruitment by seed, and possess no obvious mechanism for long-distance seed dispersal. Although aware that woodland herbs disperse poorly, ecologists have tacitly assumed that, given long periods of time, even small dispersal distances would allow woodland herbs to colonize the vast geographic region they now occupy. We examined this assumption for the understory herb Asarum canadense. To estimate long-term rates of spread by seed, we calibrated seed- dispersal diffusion models with life history data and with data on seed carries by ants. We supplemented our field observations and modeling results forA. canadensewith a literature survey on the dispersal capabilities of other plant species. Ants transported A. canadense seeds up to 35 m, the largest distance ants are known to move the seeds of any woodland herb. Empirically calibrated diffusion models indicated that over the last 16 000 yr A. canadense should only have traveled 10-11 km from its glacial refugia. In actuality, A. canadense moved hundreds of kilometers during this time. Models that examined the tail of A. canadense's seed-dispersal curve indicated that oc- casional dispersal events had to have a high frequency ($0.001 on a per seed basis) and a large magnitude (dispersal distance .1 km) for A. canadense to have traveled over 200 km in 16 000 yr. The literature survey showed that most woodland herbs and many other forest, desert, coastal, and open-habitat plant species have limited seed-dispersal capabil- ities, similar to those in A. canadense. We conclude that woodland herbs, as well as many other plants, disperse so slowly that there is no documented mechanism by which most of these species could have reached their present geographical range since the last glacial maximum. This suggests that occasional events leading to long-distance dispersal dominate the Holocene colonization of northern temperate forest by woodland herbs, and this, in turn, has implications for issues ranging from the importance of genetic analyses to the structure of metapopulation models.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Naturalization and invasion of alien plants: concepts and definitions

TL;DR: It is proposed that the term ‘invasive’ should be used without any inference to environmental or economic impact, and terms like ‘pests’ and ‘weeds’ are suitable labels for the 50–80% of invaders that have harmful effects.
Book

The ecology of seeds

TL;DR: This work has shown clear trends in the dispersal and regeneration of seeds in disturbed areas, and these trends are likely to continue into the next decade.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the relationship between niche and distribution

TL;DR: Hutchinson’s niche concept can be modified to incorporate the influences of niche width, habitat availability and dispersal, as well as interspecific competition per se, and a simulation model called NICHE is introduced that embodies many of Hutchinson's original niche concepts and is used to predict patterns of species distribution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Long-distance seed dispersal in plant populations.

TL;DR: It is argued that genetic methods provide a broadly applicable way to monitor long-distance seed dispersal and, hence, that better data is needed from the tails of seeds that travel long distances.
Journal ArticleDOI

Propagule dispersal in marine and terrestrial environments: a community perspective

TL;DR: The results validate some long-standing views about the greater dispersal potential of species in the ocean, but also highlight the extreme heterogeneity in dispersal scale among marine species.
References
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Book

Population Biology of Plants

Journal ArticleDOI

Population Biology of Plants.

Journal ArticleDOI

Random dispersal in theoretical populations.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used the random walk problem as a starting point for the analytical study of dispersal in living organisms and applied the law of diffusion to the understanding of the spatial distribution of population density in both linear and two-dimensional habitats.
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