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Attractive tree ISO lemur to start a family.


A much discussed, rarely demonstrated kind of relationship between plants and animals Plants and Animals are a Canadian indie-rock band from Montreal, comprised of guitarist-vocalists Warren Spicer and Nic Basque, and drummer-vocalist Matthew Woodley.[1] They are signed to Secret City Records.  has turned up between certain trees and the lemurs of Madagascar, report German researchers.

Twenty tree species in the island's dry forests depend largely on lemurs to eat their fruit and disperse their seeds, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Jorg U. Ganzhorn of the Institute of Zoology The Institute of Zoology (IoZ) is the research division of the Zoological Society of London (ZSL). It is a government-funded research institute specialising in scientific issues relevant to the conservation of animal species and their habitats.  in Hamburg and his colleagues. In the August CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, they warn that the new generation of these dependent species looks sparse in forest fragments where lemurs are disappearing.

Conservationists have fretted for years about the possibility that the loss of fruit-eating animals could wipe out the plant species that they disperse. Fruit that plops to the ground under maternal branches rarely gets a good start in life. It faces such menaces as deep shade and seed-damaging grazers that know where to find a good thing. Seeds in fruit eaten by the right animal, however, can hitchhike hitch·hike  
v. hitch·hiked, hitch·hik·ing, hitch·hikes

v.intr.
To travel by soliciting free rides along a road.

v.tr.
To solicit or get (a free ride) along a road.
 in its gut to more promising spots.

Demonstrating ecological effects of fruit eaters has been difficult, Ganzhorn explains, because so many diets overlap. In parts of Africa, a fruit that doesn't get gobbled by monkeys could still be spread by antelopes, bats, birds, or elephants. Some New World floodplain floodplain, level land along the course of a river formed by the deposition of sediment during periodic floods. Floodplains contain such features as levees, backswamps, delta plains, and oxbow lakes.  trees even get dispersed by fish.

Also, a tree can live so long that ephemeral creatures like people might not notice that the loss of seed dispersers is changing a forest. "It looks all bright and sunny," Ganzhorn says, yet the nonreproducing trees are just "living dead."

One famous proposed example of a disperser affecting a plant turns out to be less than clear, Ganzhorn notes. In the 1970s, scientists reported that no new generation of Calvaria calvaria /cal·va·ria/ (kal-var´e-ah) [L.] the domelike superior portion of the cranium, comprising the superior portions of the frontal, parietal, and occipital bones.

cal·var·i·a
n. pl.
 trees had sprouted in Mauritius in the last couple of centuries. They speculated that without the dodo, the tree seeds no longer germinate. More recent work, however, has located some postdodo saplings.

Madagascar appears to be the perfect place to look for a new example of disperser dependence because the island has few fruit-eating mammals and birds, Ganzhorn notes. He has watched animals and collected droppings year-round. Lemurs seem to be major dispersers, especially the brown lemur lemur (lē`mər), name for prosimians, or lower primates, of two related families, found only on Madagascar and adjacent islands. Lemurs have monkeylike bodies and limbs, and most have bushy tails about as long as the body. . With the possible exception of the bush pig bush pig

Portamochoerus porcus, an animal similar to wild boar with a long snout, pointed ears, big bristles and a mane.
, it was the only animal that eats and disperses seeds greater than 11 millimeters long.

Madagascar's booming human population is wiping out wild habitat. The researchers compared sapling numbers at plots in extended forests with plots in forest fragments where much of the largest wildlife had disappeared. In the fragments without the brown lemur, many fewer saplings of the 20 tree species dependent on lemurs were sprouting than in the larger areas. Saplings from trees dispersed by other animals thrived in both locations.

"It's the first place we've been able to make the connection," Ganzhorn says.

Kent H. Redford of the Wildlife Conservation Society in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 welcomes the study as "amongst the best we've got" on disperser dependence. For a bulletproof Refers to extremely stable hardware and/or software that cannot be brought down no matter what unusual conditions arise. See industrial strength.

bulletproof - Used of an algorithm or implementation considered extremely robust; lossage-resistant; capable of correctly
 case, Redford would require studies that add and remove animals from plots. He says that he also wants to know more about other forest interactions, such as what rodents and ants do to the seeds that lemurs leave behind.

Despite his questions, Redford finds value in correlational studies such as this one. "There's a tension between our work as scientists and our work as conservationists," he says. "If we wait for proof that convinces us as scientists, the chances are there will be no work for us as conservationists."
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Title Annotation:research indicates that lemurs in Madagascar help spread the seeds of certain trees
Author:Milius, S.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:6MADA
Date:Jul 31, 1999
Words:575
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