Abstract
We examine relationships between fruit production and patterns of primate and hornbill densities on Sulawesi and Sumatra, Indonesia. Sumatra lies within the Asian biogeographic realm and has greater biodiversity while Sulawesi lies within Wallacea and has greater endemism. Phenological samples share 51% families, 29% genera but only 7% species. Generally, Sumatran trees are dispersed more often by small birds, bats and squirrels. Sulawesi has more wind-dispersed species. Fruiting is more seasonal on Sulawesi and is related to rainfall while Sumatran fruiting patterns show no relationship with rainfall. Sulawesi has larger trees, larger crops and smaller fruits. Average fruit production is five times higher on Sulawesi. On both islands, figs contribute disproportionately to fruit biomass. Hornbill and primate assemblages are less complex on Sulawesi but biomass of both groups is significantly higher. Hornbills and primates share 41 and 45% of diet species on Sumatra and Sulawesi, respectively. Wide-ranging hornbills on both islands decline in number or leave study areas when fig availability is low. Primates and hornbills (except Buceros rhinoceros) do not respond to the availability of other important diet species in the Anacardiaceae, Annonaceae, Meliaceae or Myristicaceae families. Fig availability influences resource defense and grouping patterns of primates and hornbills. We suggest that figs are a keystone guild due to their prime influence on abundance, distribution and behavior of large frugivores in Asia and Wallacea.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
References
Anggraini, K., M.F. Kinnaird, and T.G. O’Brien. 2000. The effects of fruit availability and habitat disturbance on a Sumatran hornbill community. Bird Conservation International, 10, 189–202.
Bonaccorso, F. 1979. Foraging and reproductive ecology in a Panamanian bat community. Bulletin of the Florida State Museum for Biological Science, 4, 359–408.
Borges, R.M. 1993. Figs, Malabar giant squirrels and fruit shortages within two tropical Indian forests. Biotropica, 25, 183–190.
Bronstein, J.L. and K. Hoffmann. 1987. Spatial and temporal variation in frugivory at a Neotropical fig, Ficus pertusa. Oikos, 49, 261–268.
Buckland, S.T., Anderson, D.R., Burnham, K.P. and Laake, J.L. 1993. DISTANCE Sampling: Estimating Abundance of Biological Populations. Chapman and Hall, London.
Burnham, K.P, D.R. Anderson, and J.L Laake. 1980. Estimation of density from line-transect sampling of biological populations. Wildlife Monographs, 72, 1–222.
Cahill, A.J. and J.S. Walker. 2000. The effects of forest fire on the nesting success of the Red-knobbed Hornbill, Aceros cassidix. Bird Conservation International, 10, 109–114.
Conklin, N. L. and R. W. Wrangham. 1994. The value of figs to a hind-gut fermenting frugivore: a nutritional analysis. Biochemical Systematics and Ecology, 22, 137–151.
Curran, L.M. and M. Leighton. 2000. Vertebrate responses to spatiotemporal variation in seed production of mast-fruiting Dipterocarpaceae. Ecological Monographs, 70, 101–128.
Curran, L.M., I. Caniago, G.D. Paoli, D. Astianti, M. Kusneti, M. Leighton, C.E. Nirarita, and H. Haeruman. 1999. Impact of El Nino and logging on canopy tree recruitment in Borneo. Science, 286, 2184–2188.
Ernest, S.K.M. and J.H. Brown. 2001. Delayed compensation for missing keystone species by colonization. Science, 292, 101–104.
Food and Agriculture Organization. 1981. Management plan for the Bukit Barisan Selatan National Park, Lampung, Sumatra. FAO, Bogor.
Fooden, J. 1969. Taxonomy and evolution of the monkeys of Celebes. Biblioteca Primatologica, 10, 1–148.
Foster, R. 1982. The seasonal rhythm of fruit fall on Barro Colorado Island. In E.G. Leigh, Jr., A.S. Rand, and D.M. Windsor (Eds.). The ecology of a tropical forest: seasonal rhythms and long-term change, pp. 151–172. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C.
Groves, C.P. 1980. Speciation in Macaca: the view from Sulawesi. In D.G. Lindburg (Ed.). The Macaques: studies in ecology, behavior and evolution, pp. 84–124. Van Nostrand, New York.
Guitier-Hion, A., and J.P. Michaloud. 1989. Figs: are they keystone resources for frugivorous vertebrates throughout the tropics? A test in Gabon. Ecology, 70, 1826–1833.
Hadiprakarso, Y. 2000. Study of diet composition for hornbill species of the Bukit Barisan Selatan National Park, Lampung. Unpublished undergraduate thesis, Pakuan University, Bogor, Indonesia. 71 pp (in Indonesian).
Hadiprakarsa, Y. and M.F. Kinnaird. in press. Foraging characteristics for an assemblage of four Sumatran hornbill species. Bird Conservation International.
Hulbert, S.H. 1997. Functional importance vs keystoneness: reformulating some questions in theoretical biocenology. Australian Journal of Ecology, 22, 369–382.
International Council for Bird Preservation. 1992. Putting biodiversity on the map: priority areas for global conservation. ICBP, Cambridge.
International Union for Conservation of Nature. 1991. Atlas of tropical rainforests. Gland: IUCN Special Publication.
Janzen, D.H. 1979. How to be a fig. Annuual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 10, 13–52.
Johns, A. 1983. Ecological effects of selective logging in a West Malaysian rain forest. Unpubl. PhD disseration. Cambridge University, Cambridge.
Kalko, E.J., E.A. Herre, and C.O. Handley. 1996. Relation of fig fruit characteristics to fruit-eating bats in the New and Old World tropics. Journal of Biogeography, 23, 565–576.
Kemp, A. 1995. The Hornbills. Oxford University Press, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Kinnaird, M.F. 1998. Evidence for effective seed dispersal by the Sulawesi Red-knobbed Hornbill, Aceros cassidix. Biotropica, 30, 50–55.
Kinnaird, M.F., Y. Hadiprakarsa, and P. Thiensongrusamee. 2003. Aerial jousting by Helmeted Hornbills: observations from Indonesia and Thailand. Ibis, 145, 506–508.
Kinnaird, M. F. and T.G. O’Brien. 1998. Ecological effects of wildfire on lowland rainforest in Sumatra. Conser. Biol., 12, 954–956.
Kinnaird, M.F. and T.G. O’Brien. 1999. Breeding ecology of the Sulawesi Red-knobbed Hornbill, Aceros cassidix. Ibis, 141, 60–69.
Kinnaird, M.F., T.G. O’Brien, and S. Suryadi. 1996. Population fluctuation in Sulawesi Red-knobbed Hornbills: tracking figs in space and time. Auk, 113, 431–440.
Kinnaird, M.F., T.G. O’Brien and S. Suryadi. 1999. Importance of figs to Sulawesi’s imperiled wildlife. Tropical Biodiversity, 6, 5–18.
Kinnaird, M.F., E.W. Sanderson, T.G. O’Brien, H.T. Wibisono and G. Woolmer. 2003. Deforestation trends in a tropical landscape and the implications for endangered large mammals. Conservation Biology, 17, 245–257.
Laake, J. L, S.T. Buckland, D.R. Anderson, and K. P. Burnham. 1993. DISTANCE user’s guide version 2.0. Colorado Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, Colorado.
Lambert, F. 1990. Avifaunal changes following selective logging of a north Bornean rainforest. Institute of Tropical Biology, University of Aberdeen, Scotland.
Lambert, F. R. & Marshall, A.G. 1991. Keystone characteristics of birds-dispersed Ficus in a Malaysian lowland rain forest. Journal of Ecology, 79, 793–809.
Lambert, F. R. 1989. Fig eating and seed dispersal by pigeons in a Malaysian lowland forest. Ibis, 131, 512–527.
Lambert, F. R. 1991. The conservation of fig-eating birds in Malaysia. Biol. Conser., 58, 31–40.
Leighton, M. 1982. Fruit Resources and Patterns of Feeding, Spacing and Grouping Among Sympatric Bornean Hornbills (Bucerotidae). Unpubl. Ph.D. dissertation, University of California, Davis.
Leighton, M. 1993. Modelling dietary selectivity by Bornean orangutans: Evidence for integration of multiple criteria in fruit selection. Intrnational Journal of Primatology, 14, 257–313.
Leighton, M. and D.R. Leighton. 1983. Vertebrate responses to fruiting seasonality within a Bornean rain forest. In S.L. Sutton, T.C. Whitmore, and A.C. Chadwick (Eds.). Tropical rain forest: ecology and management. Blackwell Scientific Publications, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Chivers, D.J. 1974. The Siamang in Malaya. Contributions to Primatology 4, 1–335.
Meffe, G.K. and C.R. Carroll. 1994. Principles of Conservation Biology. Sinauer Assoc. Sunderland, MA.
Milton, K. E.M. Windsor, S.W. Morrison, and M.A. Estribit. 1982. Fruiting phonologies of two Neotropical Ficus species. Ecology, 63, 752–762.
Nurcahyo, A. 1999. A study of the daily behavior of siamang (Hylobates syndactylus) in Bukit Barisan National Park. Unpubl. undergraduate thesis. University of Gadjah Mada, Yogyakarta, Indonesia. (In Indonesian).
O’Brien, T.G. 1997. Behavioural ecology of the North Sulawesi Tarictic Hornbill, Penelopides exarhatus exarhatus, during the breeding season. Ibis, 139, 97–101.
O’Brien, T.G. and M.F. Kinnaird. 1994. Notes on the density and distribution of the endemic Sulawesi tarictic hornbill (Penelopides exarhatus exarhatus) in the Tangkoko-Dua Saudara Nature Reserve, North Sulawesi. Tropical Biodiversity, 2, 252–260.
O’Brien, T.G. and M.F. Kinnaird. 1996. Birds and mammals of the Bukit Barisan Selatan National Park, Sumatra, Indonesia. Oryx, 30, 207–217.
O’Brien, T.G. and M.F. Kinnaird. 1996. Changing populations of birds and mammals in North Sulawesi. Oryx, 30, 150–156.
O’Brien, T.G. and M.F. Kinnaird. 1997. Behavior, diet and movement patterns of the Sulawesi crested black macaque, Macaca nigra. International Journal of Primatology, 18, 321–351.
O’Brien, T.G. and M.F. Kinnaird. 2000. Differential vulnerability of large birds and mammals to hunting in North Sulawesi, Indonesia and the outlook for the future. In J. G. Robinson and E. Bennett (Eds.). Hunting for Sustainability in the Tropics, pp. 199–213. Columbia University Press, New York.
O’Brien, T.G., M.F. Kinnaird, E.S. Dierenfeld, N.L. Conklin-Brittain, R. Wrangham, and S. Silver. 1998. What’s so special about figs. Nature, 392, 668.
O’Brien, T.G., M.F. Kinnaird, P. Jepson, and I. Setiawan. 1998. Effect of forest size and structure on the distribution of Sumba Wreathed Hornbills, Aceros everetti. In P. Poonswad (Ed.). Proceedings of the Second Asian Hornbill Workshop, pp. 209–218. BRPT, Bangkok, Thailand.
O’Brien, T.G., M.F. Kinnaird, A. Nurcahyo, M. Prasetyaningrum and M. Iqbal. 2003b. Effects of ENSO-related wildfires on siamangs in a Sumatran rainforest. Animal Conservation, 6, 115–121.
O’Brien, T.G., M.F. Kinnaird, H.T. Wibisono. 2003a. Crouching tigers, hidden prey: Sumatran tiger and prey populations in a tropical forest landscape. Animal Conservation, 6, 131–139.
Payne, J., C.M. Francis, and K. Phillipps. 1985. A field guide to the mammals of Borneo. Sabah Society, Sabah, Malaysia.
Peres, C. 2000. Identifying keystone plant resources in tropical forests: the case of gums from Parkia pods. Journal of Tropical Ecology, 16, 1–31.
Poonswaad, P., A. Tsuji and C. Ngarmpngsai. 1987. A comparative ecological study of four sympatric hornbills. Acta XIX Congressus Internationalis Ornithologi. 2, 2781–2791.
Power, M.E. & L.S. Mills. 1995. The keystone cops meet in Hilo. TREE, 10, 182–184.
Powers, M.E., D. Tilman, J.A. Estes, B.A. Menge, W.J. Bond, L. S. Mills, G. Daily, J.C. Castilla, J. Lubchenco, and R.T. Paine. 1996. Challenges in the quest for keystones. BioScience, 46, 609–620.
Rombang, W. 1999. The ecology of mixed species foraging flocks in the Bukit Barisan Selatan National Park. Unpubl. undergraduate thesis, University of Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia (in Indonesian).
Rowe, N. 1996. The Pictorial Guide to the Living Primates. Pogonias Press, East Hampton, New York.
Rusmanto, M. 2002. The role of siamangs (Symphalangus syndactylus) in seed dispersal in the Bukit Barisan Selatan National Park, Sumatra. Unpubl. undergraduate thesis, University of Gadjah Mada, Yogyakarta, Indonesia. (In Indonesian).
Shanahan, M. S. So, S.G. Compton and R. Corlett. 2001. Fig-eating by vertebrate frugivores: a global review. Biological Review, 76, 529–572.
Sitompul, A.F., M.F. Kinnaird and T.G. O’Brien. In press. Size matters: the effects of forest fragmentation and resource availability the endemic sumba island hornbill. Bird Conservation International.
Smuts, B., D.L. Cheney, R. M. Seyfarth, R.W. Wrangham, and T.T. Struhsaker. 1987. Primate Societies. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois.
Sokal, R.R. and J.F. Rohlf 1981. Biometry: Second Edition. W.H. Freeman and Co. New York.
Sterck, L. 1995. Females, foods and fights: a socioecological comparison of the sympatric Thomas langur and long-tailed macaque. Unpubl. dissertation, Universiteit Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands.
Stahle, D.W. et al. 1998. Experimental dendroclimatic reconstruction of the Southern Oscillation. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, 70, 2137–2152.
Sugardjito, J. I.J.A. Te Boekhorst, and J.A.R.A.M. Van Hooff. 1987. Ecological constraints of the grouping of wild orang-utans (Pongo pygmaeus) in the Gunung Leuser National Park, Sumatra, Indoensia. International Journal of Primatology, 8, 17–41.
Sugardjito, J. C.H. Southwick, J. Supriatna, A. Kohlhaas, S. Baker, J. Erwin, K. Froelich, and N. Lerche. 1989. Population survey of macaques in Northern Sulawesi. American Journal of Primatology, 18, 285–301.
Suryadi, S., M.F. Kinnaird, and T.G. O’Brien. 1999. Home ranges and daily movements of the Sulawesi Red-knobbed Hornbill during the non-breeding season. In P. Poonswad (Ed.). Proceedings of the Second Asian Hornbill Workshop, pp. 159–170. BRTP, Bangkok, Thailand.
Suryadi, S., M.F. Kinnaird, T.G. O’Brien, and J. Supriatna. 1996. Time budget of the Sulawesi Red-Knobbed Hornbill during the non-breeding season at Tangkoko-DuaSudara Nature Reserve, North Sulawesi. Pp. 123–126. In: Kitchener, D.L. and A. Suyanto (Eds.), Proceedings of the First International Conference on Eastern Indonesian-Australian Vertebrate Fauna.
Suryadi, S., M.F. Kinnaird, T.G. O’Brien, J. Supriatna, and S. Somadikarta. 1994. Food preferences of the Sulawesi Red-knobbed Hornbill during the non-breeding season. Tropical Biodiversity, 2, 377–384.
Terborgh, J. 1983. Five New World Primates: a study in comparative ecology. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.
Terborgh, J. 1986. Keystone plant resources. In M. Soule (Ed.). Conservation biology: the science of scarcity and diversity, pp 330–344. Sinauer, Sunderland, Massachusetts.
van Schaik, C. 1996. Strangling figs: their role in the forest. In C. van Schaik and J. Supriatna (Eds.). Leuser: a Sumatran Sanctuary, pp. 112–120. Yayasan Bina Sains Hayati Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia.
Whitmore, T.C. 1984, The Tropical Rainforest of the Far East, Second Edition. Clarendon Press, Oxford.
Whitten, T., S.J. Damanik, J. Anwar, and N. Hisyam. 1997. Ecology of Sumatra. Periplus Editions, Singapore.
Wrangham, R.W., N.L. Conklin, G. Etot, J. Obus, K.D. Hunt, M.D. Hauser, and A.P. Clark. 1993. The value of figs to chimpanzees. International Journal of Primatology, 14, 243–255.
Wright, S.J. and C.P. van Schaik. 1994. Light and the phenology of tropical trees. American Naturalist, 143, 192–199.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2005 Springer
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Kinnaird, M.F., O’brien, T.G. (2005). Fast Foods of the Forest: The Influence of Figs on Primates and Hornbills Across Wallace’s Line. In: Dew, J.L., Boubli, J.P. (eds) Tropical Fruits and Frugivores. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-3833-X_9
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/1-4020-3833-X_9
Publisher Name: Springer, Dordrecht
Print ISBN: 978-1-4020-3832-7
Online ISBN: 978-1-4020-3833-4
eBook Packages: Biomedical and Life SciencesBiomedical and Life Sciences (R0)