Habitat fragmentation and disturbance are known to impact animals and plants in different ways, depending on species’ characteristics and the type and scale of habitat modification involved. In contrast, direct or indirect ramifications on mutualistic relationships between plants and animals are less clear, possibly because general patterns are confounded by the diffuse nature of many of these interactions. Here, we examine how fragment size and/or severe disturbance of a Kenyan mountain cloud forest affects the frugivore community and seed removal of a large‐seeded, bird‐dispersed tree of the forest interior, for three consecutive years. Forest deterioration reduced avian visitation and seed removal rates independent of fragment size, consistently so despite strong temporal variation in fruit production over the three‐year study. In disturbed forest fragments, seed removal rates were on average 3.5 times lower than in more intact ones. Strong differences in both visitation and seed removal rates were largely attributable to shifts in frugivore assemblages, characterized by loss or reduced abundance of the most effective seed dispersers, most of which were forest specialists. Although some disturbed fragments benefited from visits of non‐forest dependent seed dispersers, such ‘resilience’ was not predictable or reliable in time or space. We conclude that disruption of seed disperser‐seed interactions in highly fragmented and disturbed tropical forests may be persistent in time when resiliency is inadequate, possibly posing long‐term effects on tree communities.
The development of offshore wind farms (OWFs) in the North Sea has increased considerably to create alternatives for fossil fuel energy. Activities related to the construction of OWFs, in particular gravity-based foundations (GBFs), are mainly associated to dredging, causing direct effects to the macrofauna in the seabed. The sediment characteristics and macrofauna were studied before and after construction (2005-2010) of six GBFs in an OWF in the Belgian part of the North Sea. We distinguished natural from anthropogenic-related fluctuations in macrofaunal communities by analysing a long-term dataset (1980-2012). The analysed sandbanks are characterised by sandy substrates and a community with low species abundance (180-812 ind m(-2)) and diversity (6-15 species per 0.1 m(2)). Strong temporal variations were observed possibly related to variable weather conditions in the area. Significant differences in community composition were observed due to the installation of six GBFs in the construction year of the OWF followed by a rapid recovery a year later and confirmed by the benthic ecosystem quality index BEQI. Even though the construction of GBFs creates a physical disturbance to the seabed, the macrobenthic community of these sediments have illustrated a fast recovery potential
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