Evidence that long‐distance dispersal of aquatic invertebrates by ducks increases with propagule size

Author:

Santamaría Luis12ORCID,Charalambidou Iris23ORCID,Viana Duarte145ORCID,van Donk Ellen2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Estación Biológica de Doñana (EBD‐CSIC) Sevilla Spain

2. NIOO–KNAW Netherlands Institute of Ecology Wageningen The Netherlands

3. Department of Life and Health Sciences, School of Sciences and Engineering University of Nicosia Nicosia Cyprus

4. German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle‐Jena‐Leipzig Leipzig Germany

5. Leipzig University Leipzig Germany

Abstract

AbstractMigratory ducks are key dispersal agents for aquatic organisms, yet differences in their potential for short‐ and long‐distance dispersal are still poorly understood, particularly differences among aquatic invertebrate taxa.Using seven species of aquatic invertebrates and a duck species known to feed on them in the wild (the northern shoveler) as a model system, we evaluated whether their potential for endozoochorous dispersal varies among five of the species and scales with propagule size for the seven species. We also tested the expectation of a lower dispersal potential for invertebrate propagules, as compared to plant seeds; and evaluated whether intra‐specific variation (in particular, sexual dimorphism) influences the potential of waterbirds as dispersal vectors.An experiment with five invertebrate species demonstrated that most resting eggs (68%–95%) were retrieved by 4 hr after ingestion, with maximum gut‐passage times ranging from 16 hr forDaphnia magnato 36 hr forArtemia salinaandThamnocephalus platyurus. Using models that combine migratory duck movements with gut‐passage times, we show that aquatic invertebrates may disperse frequently over distances of 15–16 km (median dispersal distance) and regularly over distances up to 110–166 km (Q99distance).Increasing propagule size resulted in increasing gut‐passage times, decreasing survival of gut passage and decreasing hatching success. While propagule size had no effects on “regular” dispersal distances (mean, median,Q95andQ99), the frequency of long‐distance dispersal increased with it.Increasing propagule size therefore had two contrasting effects on invertebrate dispersal potential, decreasing the frequency of dispersal (fewer seeds dispersed) but increasing the potential for long‐distance dispersal.Conclusions: We provide evidence that endozoochory of invertebrate propagules by waterbirds results in frequent dispersal among wetlands (tens of km) and regular dispersal at regional scale (over a hundred km).

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Aquatic Science

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