Replication Data for: Perfect poopers; Passerine birds facilitate sexual reproduction in clonal keystone plants of the boreal forest through directed endozoochory towards dead wood

This data concerns directed endozoochorous seed disperal by passerine birds towards tree stumps and seedling establishment of berry-producing Vaccinium shrubs at such microsites. We collected data from 142 cut stumps and paired forest-floor plots in a managed borest forest in Trøndelag county, centr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Arnberg, Mie P., Patten, Michael A., Klanderud, Kari, Haddad, Camela, Larsen, Oddbjørn, Steyaert, Sam M. J. G.
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:81927b70ac1320b65a83376e3111fa5d5bd1eedad34ad58e7d901f14a18151f2
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Summary:This data concerns directed endozoochorous seed disperal by passerine birds towards tree stumps and seedling establishment of berry-producing Vaccinium shrubs at such microsites. We collected data from 142 cut stumps and paired forest-floor plots in a managed borest forest in Trøndelag county, central Norway. The data files includes: (1) Vaccinium seedling and passerine scat counts at stump and paired forestfloor microsites; (2) environmental variables recorded at stump level; and (3) habitat variables derived from LiDAR data and land use maps. The dataset contains replication data for the related publication: Arnberg, M. P., Patten, M. A., Klanderud, K., Haddad, C., Larsen, O. & Steyaert, S. M. J. G. (2023). Perfect poopers; passerine birds facilitate sexual reproduction in clonal keystone plants of the boreal forest through directed endozoochory towards dead wood. Forest Ecology and Management, 532, 120842. Article abstract: Berry-producing Vaccinium shrubs are keystone species in boreal forest ecosystems and their berries provide an essential food source for many vertebrates. In Fennoscandia, both the abundance and cover of Vaccinium have decreased in forests, with intensive forestry practice as a main driver. Vaccinium seedling recruitment is constricted to recruitment windows of opportunity and appears to be infrequent, mainly due to seed dispersal limitation. Passerine birds are key players in seed dispersal, which can be directed towards perching points such as coarse woody debris. In this study, we investigated the potential for directed endozoochory by passerine birds towards cut stumps and if such stumps were viable recruitment windows for Vaccinium species, in an intensively managed boreal forest landscape of central Norway. We surveyed stump and paired forest floor microsites for passerine scat (i.e. potential seed rain) and Vaccinium seedlings. We collected passerine scat and conducted germination experiments to assess if they contained viable seed. We tested the microsite effect (i.e. forest floor/stump) on scat deposition and seedling establishment and then used modified ensemble classifiers to identify important environmental factors affecting scat deposition and seedling establishment patterns. We found that passerine scat was disproportionally deposited on stumps, and that the vast majority of scat contained viable Vaccinium seed. Stumps were also suitable recruitment windows for Vaccinium species, as a higher probability of seedling establishment occurred at stumps compared with the forest floor. However, scat deposition and seedling establishment at stumps were rather contextual and determined by environmental variables. The probability of scat deposition increased with higher complexity of the vertical forest structure and lower canopy cover, whereas seedling establishment required bryophyte cover and larger stumps, or alternatively smaller stumps with competition-free spaces. Our results highlight a pathway to successful sexual reproduction for Vaccinium species in managed forests: passerine birds direct endozoochorous seed dispersal towards tree stumps, which can offer suitable conditions for seedling establishment. However, the spatiotemporal variability both in forest stand structure and in stump conditions have a strong influence on the success of sexual recruitment via this pathway.