Abstract
Selective pressures on seed size could vary among the different stages of plant life cycles, so no simple relation could explain a priori its evolution. Here, we determined the relationships between seed size and two fitness components—seed dispersal and survival from predation—in a bird-dispersed tree, Crataegus monogyna. We interpret these relationships in relation to the patterns of mass allocation to fruit and seed components. Selection patterns were assessed at two levels (1) selection pressures on the parent tree; comparing seed dispersal efficiency among individual plants and (2) selection pressures at the individual seed level; comparing seed size variation (i) before and after dispersal, and (ii) before and after postdispersal seed predation. Dispersal efficiency (percentage of seed crop dispersed) was positively correlated with fruit mass and fruit width. Differences in crop size did not offset this effect, and larger seeds were overrepresented in the seed rain relative to the seed pool before dispersal. However, the advantage of larger seeds during the dispersal stage was cancelled later by an opposite selection pressure exerted by seed predators. As a result, smaller seeds had a higher probability of surviving postdispersal seed predation, establishing an evolutionary conflict imposed by the need for dispersal and the danger of being predated. Birds and rodents preferentially selected highly profitable fruits and seeds in terms of the relative proportion of their components. Larger fruits had a higher pulp to seed proportion than smaller ones, and all seeds had the same proportion of coat relative to the embryo-plus-endosperm fraction. Hence, although predator pressures were stronger than disperser ones, larger seeds invested proportionally less in structural defense than in dispersal.
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Acknowledgements
We thank Mariajo Bañuelos and Fernando González for useful comments on earlier versions of the manuscript. Fernando González also assisted us in statistical analyses. Two anonymous referees and the associate editor, Mark van Kleunen made numerous and valuable comments that greatly improved the manuscript. Angel Fidalgo helped during the fieldwork. We acknowledge a grant PFPU (MEC) to IM, a contract from Programme “Ramón y Cajal” (MCYT, Fondo Social Europeo) to DG, and the projects REN2003-0173 and CGL2004-2936 (MEC) to DG.
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Martínez, I., García, D. & Obeso, J.R. Allometric allocation in fruit and seed packaging conditions the conflict among selective pressures on seed size. Evol Ecol 21, 517–533 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10682-006-9132-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10682-006-9132-x