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Colombia Forestal

Print version ISSN 0120-0739

Abstract

RAMIREZ, Beatriz H.; PARRADO-ROSSELLI, Ángela  and  STEVENSON, Pablo. SEED DISPERSAL OF A USEFUL PALM (Astrocaryum chambira Burret) IN THREE AMAZONIAN FORESTS WITH DIFFERENT HUMAN INTERVENTION. Colomb. for. [online]. 2009, vol.12, n.1, pp.5-16. ISSN 0120-0739.

The young leaves of Astrocaryum chambira are used by the indigenous people in the Amazon as raw material for handicrafts. However, few studies have been made on the natural history of this palm and on the indirect impact caused by the decrease of its dispersal agents. Considering that the loss of animal dispersal vectors due to hunting and landscape modification can affect seed dispersal proces ses of tropical forest plants, the goal of this study was to compare seed dispersal of A. chambira in three terra firme forests of the Colombian Amazon, with different degrees of human intervention. We censused densities of dispersal agents of A. chambira, and characterized the seed shadow. We also marked seeds to estimate dispersal distances, and established density and distance-dependent experimental stations to assess their relevance on seed dispersal. The results showed that seed removal was proportional to dispersal agent densities and forest intervention levels. Insects were the main seed predators in all sites but their effect was less pronounced in the low intervened forest site. Seed density did not show any effect on removal, while a higher probability of survival at intermediate distances from the parent palm (10 m) was found. Future studies should focus on seedling establishment, recruitment rates and the effects of human intervention on subsequent life stages of the palm.

Keywords : Amazon forest; chambira palm; seed predation; insect seed predation; rodents.

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