<div><p>Frugivory is a widespread mutualistic interaction in which frugivores obtain nutritional resources while favoring plant recruitment through their seed dispersal services. Nonetheless, how these complex interactions are organized in diverse communities, such as tropical forests, is not fully understood. In this study we evaluated the existence of plant-frugivore sub-assemblages and their phylogenetic organization in an undisturbed western Amazonian forest in Colombia. We also explored for potential keystone plants, based on network analyses and an estimate of the amount of fruit going from plants to frugivores. We carried out diurnal observations on 73 canopy plant species during a period of two years. During focal tree sampling, we ...
Forest fragmentation and habitat loss are major disruptors of plant–frugivore interactions, affectin...
Keystone plants that produce seasonally critical trophic resources comprise one of the main classes ...
Frugivores can disperse seeds in a spatially contagious pattern and generate recruitment foci (e.g. ...
Frugivory is a widespread mutualistic interaction in which frugivores obtain nutritional resources w...
Constructing community fruit–frugivore networks has proved challenging in tropical forests to date, ...
The richness and resilience of tropical forest ecosystems are best described by the myriad of ecolo...
Frugivores and zoocoric trees represent an important proportion of tropical rainforest biodiversity....
International audienceAbstract Arboreal and flying frugivorous animals represent primary dispersers ...
Tropical rainforests worldwide are under increasing pressure from human activities, which are alteri...
Seed dispersal by fruit-eating animals is a pivotal ecosystem function in tropical forests, but the ...
International audienceFrugivory in tropical forests is a major ecological process as most tre...
Analysis of plant-frugivore interactions provides a quantitative framework for integrating community...
Primates are among the most observable and best studied vertebrate order in tropical forest regions,...
Most tropical trees produce fleshy fruits that attract frugivores that disperse their seeds. Early d...
ABSTRACT Knowing the morphological and phylogenetic patterns of fruits of a plant community may eluc...
Forest fragmentation and habitat loss are major disruptors of plant–frugivore interactions, affectin...
Keystone plants that produce seasonally critical trophic resources comprise one of the main classes ...
Frugivores can disperse seeds in a spatially contagious pattern and generate recruitment foci (e.g. ...
Frugivory is a widespread mutualistic interaction in which frugivores obtain nutritional resources w...
Constructing community fruit–frugivore networks has proved challenging in tropical forests to date, ...
The richness and resilience of tropical forest ecosystems are best described by the myriad of ecolo...
Frugivores and zoocoric trees represent an important proportion of tropical rainforest biodiversity....
International audienceAbstract Arboreal and flying frugivorous animals represent primary dispersers ...
Tropical rainforests worldwide are under increasing pressure from human activities, which are alteri...
Seed dispersal by fruit-eating animals is a pivotal ecosystem function in tropical forests, but the ...
International audienceFrugivory in tropical forests is a major ecological process as most tre...
Analysis of plant-frugivore interactions provides a quantitative framework for integrating community...
Primates are among the most observable and best studied vertebrate order in tropical forest regions,...
Most tropical trees produce fleshy fruits that attract frugivores that disperse their seeds. Early d...
ABSTRACT Knowing the morphological and phylogenetic patterns of fruits of a plant community may eluc...
Forest fragmentation and habitat loss are major disruptors of plant–frugivore interactions, affectin...
Keystone plants that produce seasonally critical trophic resources comprise one of the main classes ...
Frugivores can disperse seeds in a spatially contagious pattern and generate recruitment foci (e.g. ...