Seed traits and tropical arboreal species conservation: a case study of a highly diverse tropical humid forest region in Southern Costa Rica

Tropical areas are vital for conserving endangered tree species. However, barriers to the propagation and storage of plant material still limit preservation outcomes. Seed traits are essential in conservation but have rarely been applied in the tropics. In this work, we compile information about the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biodiversity and conservation 2023-04, Vol.32 (5), p.1573-1590
Hauptverfasser: Ley-López, Juan Manuel, Wawrzyniak, Mikołaj Krzysztof, Chacón-Madrigal, Eduardo, Chmielarz, Paweł
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container_issue 5
container_start_page 1573
container_title Biodiversity and conservation
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creator Ley-López, Juan Manuel
Wawrzyniak, Mikołaj Krzysztof
Chacón-Madrigal, Eduardo
Chmielarz, Paweł
description Tropical areas are vital for conserving endangered tree species. However, barriers to the propagation and storage of plant material still limit preservation outcomes. Seed traits are essential in conservation but have rarely been applied in the tropics. In this work, we compile information about the germination and seed desiccation tolerance behaviour of 953 arboreal species from the Osa Peninsula, Costa Rica. We analysed how those traits are related to the growing strata, seed size, and dispersal mode and how they can be used to improve conservation initiatives based on the species distribution, abundance, extinction risk, and ex situ cultivation. Over a third of the species are probably recalcitrant but this number increase to almost half among the endangered and endemic ones. Most species have seeds dispersed by animals, but wind dispersal is usually orthodox and dominant in secondary forests. All species with tiny seeds and most understorey ones with small seeds are orthodox. Approximately half of the species have dormant seeds, while nearly one-third of nondormant species have cohorts with extended germination. Almost half of the species are conserved ex situ ; however, several endangered, endemics could be expected to be considered exceptional. Seed traits could target orthodox species for seed banking in tropical forests, including the potential of secondary forests and a subset of oligarch species. For the recalcitrant ones, approaches based on the risk of extinction, distribution, abundance, and ex situ status allow for prioritizing collection and conservation strategies. Under this approach, we develop a list with priority species.
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subjects Abundance
Biodiversity
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Case studies
Climate Change/Climate Change Impacts
Cohorts
Conservation
Conservation Biology/Ecology
Cost analysis
Desiccation
Dispersion
Distribution
Dormancy
Ecology
Endangered & extinct species
Endangered plants
Endangered species
Endemic species
Extinction (Biology)
Forests
Geographical distribution
Germination
Life Sciences
Original Research
Plant species
Propagation
Protection and preservation
Rare species
Seed dispersal
Seeds
Species extinction
Storage
Tropical environments
Tropical forests
Wildlife conservation
title Seed traits and tropical arboreal species conservation: a case study of a highly diverse tropical humid forest region in Southern Costa Rica
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