Journal of Plant Ecology

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热带雨林中果肉奖励对小型啮齿动物种子扩散的饱和效应

  

  • 收稿日期:2025-11-04 接受日期:2026-05-15

Pulp has a reward saturation effect on seed removal by small rodents in a tropical rainforest

Minghui Wang1,2, Haichao Li1,2, Long Lu1,2, Chaoyuan Cheng1,2, Xianfeng Yi3 and Zhibin Zhang1,2*   

  1. 1School of Ecology, Hainan University, Haikou 570228, China.
    2Hainan International One Health Institute/Hainan Provincial Key Lab for One Health, Hainan University, Haikou 570228, China.
    3School of Life Science, Qufu Normal University, Qufu 273165, China.
    *Corresponding author: Zhibin Zhang. Email: zhangzb@hainanu.edu.cn
  • Received:2025-11-04 Accepted:2026-05-15
  • Supported by:
    This work was supported by the research grant from the Hainan University [Grant No. RZ2300002832].

摘要: 肉质果果肉可作为动物传播种子的营养奖励,但果肉营养价值对种子扩散速度的影响尚缺乏研究。 为探究果肉营养价值对种子扩散速度的影响,本研究选取罗浮买麻藤(Gnetum luofuense)、黄藤(Daemonorops jenkinsiana)和龙眼(Dimocarpus longan)三种肉质果植物, 以去果肉种子、 带果肉种子以及不同果肉营养价值的人工种子(富含碳水化合物的玉米和富含蛋白质/脂肪的花生作为模拟果肉) 为研究对象, 在海南热带雨林开展了四项野外种子传播实验。 研究表明, 带果肉的龙眼种子在种子站被搬运的速度(即种子在释放点存留时间的倒数) 显著高于去果肉种子; 同时,人工果肉营养价值的提高,即花生基质质量占人工种子总质量比例的增加,显著加快了种子被啮齿动物搬运的速度,该结果支持最优觅食假说。 然而,与该假说不同的是,我们发现果肉营养价值对小型啮齿动物搬运种子的促进作用存在饱和效应, 支持我们提出的“奖励饱和假说”, 这一现象可能源于动物在觅食过程中会平衡蛋白质、脂肪和碳水化合物等多种营养需求,从而避免长期依赖单一食物来源。本研究强调了果肉在塑造热带雨林生态系统中肉质果植物-啮齿动物互作中的重要作用。

关键词: 肉质果果肉, 啮齿动物, 奖励, 单一营养饮食, 饱和效应, 种子扩散, 热带雨林

Abstract: Pulp of fleshy fruits may serve as a reward on seed dispersal by animals, but the effect of pulp nutritional value on seed removal speed has not been investigated. To quantify the effects of pulp nutritional value on seed removal speed, we conducted four experiments in the National Park of Hainan Tropical Rainforest, using depulped seeds, seeds with pulp, and artificial-pulp seeds with variable nutritional levels (carbohydrate-rich corn-based pulp and protein/fat-rich peanut-based pulp) across three tree species: Gnetum luofuense (Luofushan Joint-fir), Daemonorops jenkinsiana (Jenkins' rattan palm), and Dimocarpus longan (longan). We found intact D. longan seeds with pulp exhibited significantly higher seed removal speed (i.e. reversal value of seed survival time at the seed stations) than depulped seeds; and high pulp nutritional value (i.e. proportion of peanut mass to total artificial seed mass) significantly increased seed removal speed at seed stations, supporting the Optimal Foraging Hypothesis. However, contrasting to the hypothesis, we found pulp nutrition value showed a saturation effect on seed removal speed by small rodents, supporting our Pulp Reward Saturation Hypothesis, probably because animals would balance their nutrient demands (e.g. protein, fat and carbohydrate) by avoiding a single diet. Our study highlights the critical role of pulp in shaping seed-rodent interactions in tropical rainforest ecosystems.

Key words: Fleshy-fruit pulp, rodent, reward, mono-nutrient diet, saturation effect, seed removal, tropical rainforest