A Floristic Study of Halmahera, Indonesia Focusing on Palms (Arecaceae) and Their Seed Dispersal Dissertation

(2017). A Floristic Study of Halmahera, Indonesia Focusing on Palms (Arecaceae) and Their Seed Dispersal . 10.25148/etd.FIDC001976

thesis or dissertation chair

authors

  • Abdo, Melissa E

abstract

  • The dispersal services of frugivores affect plant community assembly, persistence, and gene flow in the short-term, and in the long-term are critical to ensuring that tropical trees and palms can regenerate in disturbed areas and can migrate amidst climate change. Halmahera is the largest Moluccan island within the Wallacea biodiversity hotspot, yet data on its plant and animal distributions and interactions are almost null. I studied the tropical trees and palms of Halmahera and their seed dispersal dynamics. Chapter I explores the palms of the Moluccan islands through field-, herbarium-, and literature- based studies. The results of herbarium specimen collections are presented within a preliminary list of palms for Halmahera’s Aketajawe-Lolobata National Park, and contextualized in a review of regional palm biogeography. Expanding beyond the study of one plant family, Chapter II compiles and examines all the tree and palm taxa of the Moluccan islands in order to infer seed dispersal syndromes for each taxon, resulting in an analysis of over 900 taxa. Zoochory was found in 93% of plant families, and nearly 30% of endemic taxa rely primarily on dispersal by large-bodied frugivores. The role of a hypothesized keystone disperser (the Papuan hornbill, Rhyticeros plicatus ruficollis) is confirmed experimentally to disperse about 10% of Halmahera’s tropical tree and palm taxa. The final chapter encompasses an ex-situ germination trial and a year-long in-situ experimental study that examines the germination and recruitment of three palm species post-ingestion by Papuan hornbills, in four different habitat types representative of Halmahera’s landscape. Palms dispersed by hornbills into disturbed habitats and primary forests resulted in enhanced recruitment, although results varied by habitat and species. Hornbills aid both in forest conservation and recovery/assembly after disturbance. The results of this dissertation provide a foundation for further ecological studies and for enhanced conservation of Halmahera island.

publication date

  • May 24, 2017

keywords

  • Flora of Malesiana
  • Moluccan Islands
  • Wallacea
  • dispersal syndromes
  • hornbills
  • plant-animal interactions
  • tropical trees

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)