“…Tawa Beilschmiedia tawa also appears to suffer from extremely low dispersal at some mainland sites (<10% of seeds captured below parent canopies had passed through a bird at three North Island sites; Silberbauer, ), although eight other studies on seed dispersal quantity in mainland New Zealand have found adequate dispersal rates (Kelly et al., ; Pegman, Perry, & Clout, ). On the Balearic Islands, introduced carnivorous mammals have indirectly lowered seedling recruitment of a perennial shrub by driving its mutualistic partner extinct (Traveset & Riera, ), while on Guam, the near‐total loss of frugivorous birds caused by the exotic brown tree snake ( Boiga irregularis ) may have caused a 61%–92% decline in seedling recruitment for two plant species (Rogers et al., ) and a reduction in seedlings of all tree species reaching canopy gaps away from parent trees (Wandrag, Dunham, Duncan, & Rogers, ). Whether the reduced dispersal we have recorded results in lowered recruitment for hinau depends on hinau's reliance on avian dispersal for improved germination (e.g., by gut passage, see Robertson, Trass, Ladley, & Kelly, ) and escape from disproportionate density‐ and distance‐dependent mortality beneath parent canopies (i.e., Janzen–Connell effects, see Comita et al., ).…”