News Release

Larger nuts end up further from tree

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research

Trees are better off if they produce large nuts. This is revealed in research by Patrick Jansen from Wageningen University. Scatterhoarding rodents appear to prefer burying larger nuts for later. The bigger the nut, the further it is buried from the tree and the more frequently it is forgotten.

Biologist Patrick Jansen investigated what happened to nuts as soon as they fell on the ground of the rainforest in French Guyana. He placed thousands of nuts on the ground in the forest. Each nut was marked with a numbered fluorescent thread. Using video cameras he observed which animals removed the nuts. He then traced the nuts using the threads sticking out of the ground and followed them until they were either eaten or grew into a seedling.

He found that the vast majority of nuts were taken by acouchies, large guinea-pig-like rodents, which are active during the day. These animals mostly use the nuts for their food store. Each nut is buried separately at a different location in the forest soil.

The rodents were found to be fussy. Larger nuts have a far greater chance of being successfully dispersed than smaller ones, as they are buried more frequently and further away. Sometimes they are buried as far as 100 metres away from the tree. The rodents often forget such nuts and therefore these can successfully germinate.

The scientist concluded, partly on the basis of other aspects of his research, that nut-producing trees may have evolved due to the fussiness of the hoarding animals. Trees which produce large nuts obtain many offspring. Over the course of time the number of trees producing large nuts increases and the number producing small nuts decreases.

According to the biologist, protecting animals in managed forests is important for tree regeneration. That has hardly happened up until now. For example, once logging has taken place the tracks for this are used by hunters who are after rodents and other important seed dispersers.

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For further information please contact Dr Patrick Jansen (Department of Environmental Sciences, Wageningen University), tel. +31 (0)317 427955 (home), e-mail: patrick.ajansen@wur.nl or Prof. Frans Bongers, tel. +31 (0)317 478029, e-mail: frans.bongers@wur.nl. The defence of the doctoral thesis took place on 7 February 2003. Dr Jansen's supervisors were Prof. Frans Bongers and Prof. Herbert Prins. A mini-symposium on seed dispersal was held in Wageningen on 6 February 2003. Further information about this can be obtained from Prof. Frans Bongers.

The acouchy is the most important disperser of nuts in the rainforest of French Guyana. Cameras were one of the devices used by the biologists from Wageningen to study nut dispersal. Image at www.nwo.nl/nieuws/.

The research was funded by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO).


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