11 Questions 114 Answers 0 Followers
Questions related from R. T. Corlett
Animals in urban areas interact with all plants that are growing outdoors, irrespective of their status as native or alien, spontaneous or cultivated, i.e. the 'total flora'. Plant ecologists,...
24 December 2021 7,596 9 View
The two Asian forest rhinos were widespread and abundant until recently, but it is no longer possible to study their ecological roles since they have been eliminated from 99.99% of their former...
04 April 2019 7,785 0 View
Nobody is in favor of extinction and all countries have laws intended to reduce extinction risks for native species of plants and animals (although never explicitly microbes, as far as I know)....
02 April 2019 5,702 9 View
If you place small seeds (< 20 mg, e.g. fig seeds) on the ground in forest in tropical and subtropical Asia, small ants soon appear and carry them away. I assume the seeds are eaten, but I...
24 July 2018 9,689 1 View
Pheidologeton diversus ants and, I presume, other species in the genus, often carry seeds of many types along their trails and columns. Some of these seeds are quite large (< 20 mg, possibly...
24 July 2018 872 5 View
Although some of the larger-beaked tits can act as predators on medium sized seeds, many (all?) tit species in East and Southeast Asia also eat soft, small-seeded fruits, such as figs. I presume a...
08 February 2017 8,520 6 View
All large, tropical, plant germplasm banks that I am aware of focus largely on crop species, using a mix of conventional low-temperature storage for desiccation-tolerant (orthodox) species and...
17 August 2016 1,383 14 View
Old World fruit bats typically drop seeds >3-4 mm under the fruiting tree or a nearby feeding roost. Smaller seeds can be swallowed and then defecated in flight, but the proportion swallowed...
17 April 2015 1,403 4 View
Almost no information on seed fate has been reported for Asian pheasants (Phasianidae), although they certainly eat fruits and are attracted to fruit baits at camera traps. They are typically the...
10 March 2015 6,349 45 View
Xylem cavitation appears to be a major cause of tree mortality during droughts. If a tree is not killed, to what extent can this cavitation be reversed when the drought ends? There is quite a lot...
08 February 2015 7,885 12 View
In many countries, the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic have seen a large increase in visits to national parks and other protected areas as people try to escape urban areas for some fresh air...
01 January 1970 9,886 30 View