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Struggling to conserve seed biodiversity: the gaps and wisdom in current research

Biodiversity conservation is huge field, but at its heart we find something very small: the seed. From seeds come the plants we need and food for the animals we hope to conserve as well. Knowledge of seed dispersal, or how seeds are generated and move through the landscape, is essential if we are to understand the influence of human activity on biodiversity.



What do we know and what do we not know? To answer these questions, Kim McConkey and colleagues, including researchers from India, Singapore, Malaysia, and Spain, reviewed research published since 2000. They sought to determine what advice should be given to conservationists. At present, advice that might help isn’t often shared in a way that affects outcomes, so they performed this review to widen channels of communication.



Red-tailed squirrel (Sciurus granatensis) feeding on a flower in Costa Rica .
Red-tailed squirrel (Sciurus granatensis) in Costa Rica

Their review looked at the four causes of changing biodiversity and what is known about how seeds interact with each of them. They are (a) fragmenting plant and animal habitat, (b) overharvesting of plants and animals, (c) invasive species crowding out native plants and animals, and (d) changing climate. Their review concluded that seed dispersal research needs to be done at larger scales and in more varied landscapes that reflect real terrain, since research often encompasses only a small, homogenous space. Research should also account for all four key drivers of biodiversity change. It is important, the review stated, for scientists to know how those drivers affect seed dispersal and what happens when more than one is present. As scientists develop more comprehensive methods, current research offers insight for both future research questions and conservation decisions.



Here’s a summary of that insight:

Dallying means less nature to study.
An agouti, an important seed disperser in Latin America.



In an attempt to isolate variables, research often fails to offer conclusions that apply to real-world scenarios. For future research on seed dispersal as it relates to biodiversity conservation, the review’s primary advice is: “Seed dispersal ecologists need to expand their field of view in order to study how seeds move — or fail to move — across real (fragmented, heterogeneous) landscapes on scales (kilometers) that matter for the long-term survival of plant and animal diversity in a changing world.”




CITATION: McConkey, Kim R., Soumya Prasad, Richard T. Corlett, Ahimsa Campos-Arceiz, Jedediah F. Brodie, Haldre Rogers, Luis Santamaria. 2012. Seed dispersal in changing landscapes. Biological Conservation 146:1-13.



Emily Eggleston is a graduate student at the University of Wisconsin – Madison. She completed a geography master’s degree in May 2012 and in the midst of a second master’s program in journalism. She has topical footholds in soil science, sustainable agriculture, and people-environment relationships.







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