Gulls contribute to olive seed dispersal within and among islands in a Mediterranean coastal area
Data files
Sep 27, 2023 version files 12.31 MB
Abstract
Aim: To analyse the role of non-frugivorous birds on seed dispersal, seed dispersal by gulls is expected to be especially instrumental in island ecosystems, as these have a smaller subset of frugivores when compared to the mainland, and because long-distance dispersal is required for plant colonization. Here we investigated the seed dispersal of olives by gulls among ten islands of the same archipelago to reveal if gulls contribute to long-distance seed dispersal including different islands, and how gulls’ adaptation to domestic olives and individual differences in foraging activities affect their seed dispersal pattern.
Location: Balearic Islands in the Western Mediterranean Sea, Spain
Taxon: Yellow-legged gulls ( Larus michahellis), Domestic and wild Olives ( Olea europaea and O. europaea var. sylvestris)
Methods: We developed seed dispersal models of the two ecotypes of olives dispersed by gulls across an archipelago, based on GPS tracking data, gut passage time, and seed viability.
Results: Mean dispersal distances were 7.67 (±12.48) km in wild and 12.57 (±13.08) km in domestic olives. Seven-point one percent of wild and 8.5% of domestic olives were dispersed among islands. Among these, 8.2% of domestic seeds were transported from large to small islands where gull colonies are located, whereas wild olives were dispersed in more variable directions. Such dispersal pattern of two olive ecotypes were consistent despite the differences in dispersal distances among individuals.
Main conclusions: Gulls contributed to long-distance olive seed dispersal including different islands. The seed dispersal of domestic olives to longer distances with specific directions may facilitate colonization and expansion of that variant if the conditions of seed deposition sites are suitable. Our findings indicate that gulls are relevant vectors for long-distance dispersal of large fleshy fruits in island ecosystems where specialist large frugivores are absent.
README: Title of Dataset: Gull tracking data for the manuscript "Gulls contribute olive seed dispersal within and among islands in a Mediterranean coastal area" by Ando et al.
The data contains GPS locations of 20 individuals of yellow-legged gulls Larus michahellis and other parameters which were used to develop the seed dispersal models in this study.
Description of the Data and file structure
This is a csv file available for R packages used in this study.
Parameter list
- fid: ID of each GPS point
- location.long: Longitude of each GPS point
- location.lat: Latitude of each GPS point
- individual.local.identifier: ID of gull individual tags
- Body.weight: Body weight of gulls (g)
- study.local.timestamp: Timestamp of GPS positioning (yyyy/mm/dd hh:mm:ss)
- Wild.olive.distribution: Presence (1) or absence (0) of wild olive vegetation in each GPS point
- Night.stay: Nighttime GPS positioning (1) and daytime positioning (0)
- Year: Year of data collection
- individual_id: Individual ID separated by years
- dist: Distances from the previous GPS point (m)
- timediff: Time difference from the previous GPS point (s)
- speed: Gulls' speed s/h at each GPS point (m/s)
- inland: GPS position inland (1) or sea (0)
- ID_LOC: Land use ID of CORINE Land Cover 2018
- islands: Name of islands in each GPS point
Missing data is shown as "NA".