The southern cassowary (Casuarius casuarius johnsonii) remains an important disperser of native plants in fragmented rainforest landscapes

Author:

Campbell Mariana A.1ORCID,Lawton Tom12,Udyawer Vinay3ORCID,Bell‐Anderson Kim S.4ORCID,Westcott David5,Campbell Hamish A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Charles Darwin University Darwin Northern Territory 0909 Australia

2. Anindilyakwa Land & Sea Rangers Groote Eylandt Northern Territory 0885 Australia

3. Australian Institute of Marine Science Darwin Northern Territory 0810 Australia

4. The University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales 2006 Australia

5. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) Atherton Queensland 4883 Australia

Abstract

AbstractLarge‐bodied frugivores are essential to the ecological function of rainforest communities. The southern cassowary (Casaurius casuarius johnsonii) is the only large frugivore in the tropical rainforests of Australia. Here, we assessed whether cassowaries remain important to native plant seed dispersal in areas where the rainforest is highly fragmented, and exotic fruits are abundant. To do this, we developed a tri‐axial acceleration logger integrated with a motion sensor and VHF radio transmitter. The telemetry device was small enough to be hidden inside a native fruit. The cassowaries ingested it, transported it and defecated it up to 24 h later with the seeds from the fruits they had ingested during the tracking period. The telemetry device was then located by VHF radio and collected with the scat. The distance travelled, activity profile, consumed fruit diversity, and scat energy content were assessed for cassowaries inhabiting regions with different degrees of urbanization. We found that cassowaries inhabiting more urbanized areas consumed the greatest proportion of fruits from exotic plants (~30%) but still incorporated a significant proportion of fruits from native plants in their diet. These individuals existed in higher states of activity and rested less than individuals inhabiting more intact swathes of rainforest, actively moving between urban gardens and the rainforest. The study shows cassowaries have a flexible foraging strategy that has enabled them to persist in rainforest‐fragmented landscapes. They remain a significant disperser of seeds from native plants between rainforest patches, and as such, cassowaries remain essential in maintaining native plant diversity within these fragmented patches.

Funder

Birds Queensland

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference30 articles.

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