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Behavioral Ecology Advance Access originally published online on June 8, 2009
Behavioral Ecology 2009 20(4):872-877; doi:10.1093/beheco/arp075
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© The Author 2009. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Society for Behavioral Ecology. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Behavior of kestrels feeding on frugivorous lizards: implications for secondary seed dispersal

David P. Padilla and Manuel Nogales

Island Ecology and Evolution Research Group (Instituto de Productos Naturales y Agrobiología-Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas), C/Astrofísico Francisco Sánchez 3, 38206 La Laguna, Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain

Address correspondence to D.P. Padilla. E-mail: dpadilla{at}ipna.csic.es.


   Abstract

Secondary seed dispersal is a multistep system that includes 2 or more dispersal processes that can increase the distance from which seeds arrive. This phenomenon is relatively common in some habitats of subtropical oceanic islands due to the frequent frugivore–predator interactions found in them. In this study, we describe how the Eurasian Kestrel is an effective disperser of plants in the secondary seed dispersal process, through interaction with frugivorous lizards. Experiments using captive wild kestrels, along with field data, showed that predation of kestrels on lizards leads to a secondary seed dispersal with 2 possible outcomes: 1) most seeds (89%) are not consumed by kestrels because they reject the lizards’ digestive tracts and so receive only the gut treatment of lizards and 2) a small fraction of seeds (11%) appeared inside the kestrel pellets as a result of indirect ingestion by this raptor, thus undergoing double gut treatment. So, 2 different seed dispersal distances may result from this interaction: 1) when the kestrels capture the lizard and transport it to a perch where the seed-containing guts are discarded and 2) when they indirectly ingest a few seeds from lizards, consequently increasing the dispersal distance. Seeds from the Macaronesian plant species Rubia fruticosa were tested, finding that those passed through kestrels had a lower germinability than those that remained inside the rejected lizards’ digestive tracts, which had similar germination rates to those from control plants (uningested seeds). The kestrel can be considered an important and effective long-distance seed disperser due to the high abundance of frugivorous lizards in their diet, their stereotyped consumption behavior, and the effectiveness of their seed dispersal.

Key words: Canary Islands, diplochory, endozoochory, frugivorous lizards, long-distance seed dispersal, predatory behavior, seed germination.

Received 9 July 2008; revised 27 March 2009; accepted 21 April 2009.


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