4.4 Article

Fruit traits of vertebrate-dispersed alien plants: smaller seeds and more pulp sugar than indigenous species

Journal

BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS
Volume 12, Issue 7, Pages 2153-2163

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10530-009-9617-y

Keywords

Bird-dispersed; Fleshy fruit; Fruit morphology; Frugivory; Invasive plant; Pulp nutrients

Funding

  1. Cooperative Research Centre for Australian Weed Management

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Vertebrates play a major role in dispersing seeds of fleshy-fruited alien plants. However, we know little of how the traits of alien fleshy fruits compare with indigenous fleshy fruits, and how these differences might contribute to invasion success. In this study, we characterised up to 38 fruit morphology, pulp nutrient and phenology traits of an assemblage of 34 vertebrate-dispersed alien species in south-eastern Queensland, Australia. Most alien fruits were small (81% < 15 mm in mean width), and had watery fruit pulps that were high in sugars and low in nitrogen and lipids. When compared to indigenous species, alien fruits had significantly smaller seeds. Further, alien fruit pulps contained more sugar and more variable (and probably greater) nitrogen per pulp wet weight, and species tended to have longer fruiting seasons than indigenous species. Our analyses suggest that fruit traits could be important in determining invasiveness and could be used to improve pre- and post-border weed risk assessment.

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