Abstract We explore the dispersal ecology of the
tropical lowland rain forest on the Vava'u island group, Kingdom of
Tonga, to understand dispersal adaptations across successional
vegetation types and by species origin. We utilise quantitative data on
the relative plant abundance (basal area for overstorey and cover for
understorey) of forest species from 64 600-m2 vegetation
plots on 13 islands. Frequencies of species by dispersal mechanisms
permit comparisons according to community types, between understorey
and overstorey taxa, and between endemic, indigenous, and exotic
species (both Polynesian and European introductions).
Birds and bats disperse 80% of the plant species in the
lowland rain forests of Vava'u; water dispersal (40% of the species) is
of secondary importance. Plants introduced by Polynesians comprise
5—10% of the rain forest overstorey; European
introductions are common
in the early successional forest, principally in the understorey. Over
30% of the indigenous trees in the late successional rain forest are
potentially dispersed by rodents, but more likely these introduced
(Polynesian and European) rats primarily act as seed predators.
Plants in the lowland tropical rain forests of Vava'u are
largely dispersed intra-island by birds and bats. While plants
dispersed by epizoochory and human cultivation are encroaching in the
early successional stages of the rain forest, perhaps the greater
effect on these tropical forests may be seed predation by rodents,
especially in late successional rain forest. Since the majority of the
indigenous rain forest species are dispersed by native fauna, it is
imperative that the extant birds and fruit bats of the Kingdom of Tonga
continue to be preserved to maintain the regeneration of the rain
forests on these relatively isolated oceanic islands.
Keywords bat dispersal; bird dispersal; fruit bats; frugivory; lowland rain forest; seed dispersal; Tonga; tropical rain forest; Vava'u
B06040; Online publication date 22 May 2007; Received 6 October 2006; accepted 2 April 2007
New Zealand Journal of Botany, 2007, Vol. 45: 393—417
0028—825X/07/4502—0393 © The Royal
Society of New Zealand 2007
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