Jw. Dalling et al., SEED DISPERSAL, SEEDLING ESTABLISHMENT AND GAP PARTITIONING AMONG TROPICAL PIONEER TREES, Journal of Ecology, 86(4), 1998, pp. 674-689
1 We examined the abundance and distribution patterns of pioneer seeds
in the soil seed bank, and of pioneer seedlings in 53 recently formed
gaps, in a 50-ha forest dynamics plot on Barro Colorado Island (BCI),
Panama. The aim was to assess the importance of dispersal limitation
(failure of seeds to arrive at all sites suitable for their germinatio
n) and establishment limitation (failure of seeds having reached a sit
e to germinate successfully and establish as seedlings) in determining
patterns of gap occupancy. 2 The abundance of seeds in the soil seed
bank was strongly negatively correlated with seed size? but was not co
rrelated with the abundance of reproductive-sized adult trees in the p
lot. In contrast, the abundance of pioneer seedlings > 10 cm height in
natural gaps was strongly correlated with adult abundance, but was no
t correlated with seed size. 3 Seedlings were non-randomly distributed
among gaps, but seedling abundance was not directly related to gap si
ze, and there was no evidence of partitioning of the light environment
of gaps by small seedlings. Large differences in growth and mortality
rates among species were observed after 1 year, and this may result i
n the gap size partitioning previously found in saplings of the same s
pecies. 4 Seedlings of most species, particularly those with large see
ds, were relatively more abundant than expected in gaps close to their
conspecific adults. Proximity to reproductives, and by inference disp
ersal limitation, therefore exerts some effect on seedling distributio
n. None the less, large differences between seed and seedling abundanc
es for some species, and low seedling occupancy rates in some gaps clo
se to adult conspecifics, suggest that seedling emergence probabilitie
s and species-specific establishment requirements may also be importan
t determinants of local abundance.