Bushmeat Database


The searchable Bushmeat Database contains more than 700 citations, including peer-reviewed journal articles, books and book chapters, technical papers, reports and conference proceedings. Citations include direct DOI-based links to the articles on the original journal or publisher’s website. To see the data displayed in a visual format, visit the Bushmeat Data Map.



Title/Keywords
Author
Year


Hunting increases dispersal limitation in the tree

Author
Forget, P. M.; Jansen, Patrick A
Year
2006
Secondary Title
Conservation Biology
Volume
21
Pages
106–113
Abstract
The sustainability of seed extraction from natural populations has been questioned recently. In- creased recruitment failure under intense seed harvesting suggests that seed extraction intensifies source lim- itation. Nevertheless, areas where more seeds are collected tend to also have more intense hunting of seed- dispersing animals. We studied whether such hunting, by limiting disperser activity, could cause quantitative dispersal limitation, especially for large crops and for crops in years of high seed abundance. In each of four Carapa procera (Meliaceae) populations in French Guiana and Surinam, two with hunting and two without, we compared seed fate for individual trees varying in crop size in years of high and low population-level seed abundance. Carapa seeds are a nontimber forest product and depend on dispersal by scatter-hoarding rodents for survival and seedling establishment. Hunting negatively affected the proportion of seeds dispersed and caused greater numbers of seeds to germinate or be infested by moths below parent trees, where they would likely die. Hunting of seed-dispersing animals disproportionally affected large seed crops, but we found no additional effect of population-level seed abundance on dispersal rates. Consistently lower rates of seed dispersal, especially for large seed crops, may translate to lower levels of seedling recruitment under hunting. Our results therefore suggest that the subsistence hunting that usually accompanies seed collection is at the cost of seed dispersal and may contribute to recruitment failure of these nontimber forest products. Seed extrac- tion from natural populations may affect seedling recruitment less if accompanied by measures adequately incorporating and protecting seed dispersers.
DOI
10.1111/j.1523-1739.2006.00590.x


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