Antbears and underground melons: A highly specialized seed dispersal mutualism mediated by scent

Societal Impact Statement Seed dispersal is critical for the establishment and persistence of populations of most plant species. We investigated the seed dispersal biology of an African melon, Cucumis humifructus, which is closely related to cultivated cucumbers and watermelons but differs in that i...

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Main Authors: Steven D. Johnson, Anka Eichhoff, Jeremy J. Midgley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-09-01
Series:Plants, People, Planet
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ppp3.10638
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author Steven D. Johnson
Anka Eichhoff
Jeremy J. Midgley
author_facet Steven D. Johnson
Anka Eichhoff
Jeremy J. Midgley
author_sort Steven D. Johnson
collection DOAJ
description Societal Impact Statement Seed dispersal is critical for the establishment and persistence of populations of most plant species. We investigated the seed dispersal biology of an African melon, Cucumis humifructus, which is closely related to cultivated cucumbers and watermelons but differs in that it buries its fruits deep underground. The fruits are located by antbears using olfaction; the antbears consume the fruit pulp and the seeds germinate in their faeces. Cucumis humifructus has become very rare in some parts of Africa and is vulnerable on account of its annual lifecycle combined with its dependence on a declining mammal species for establishing each new generation. Summary Seed dispersal mutualisms between plants and animals are seldom specialized at the species level. We investigated the highly unusual case of the dispersal of seeds of a melon Cucumis humifructus by the antbear (Orycteropus afer), a myrmecophagous African mammal. This annual plant buries its fruits c. 20 cm underground, a depth from which seedling emergence is impossible. We asked why the fruits are buried and how they are located by animals. We investigated the seed dispersal system of C. humifructus in central Namibia using camera traps, seed germination experiments and analyses of animal faeces. Coupled gas chromatography and mass spectrometry (GCMS) was used to analyse the chemistry of fruit scent. Naturally‐buried C. humifructus fruits were excavated solely by antbears. Antbear faecal pellets often contained intact C. humifructus seeds. All of the C. humifructus plants that we examined originated in antbear pellets. Fruits placed experimentally above ground or buried shallowly were eaten by porcupines which act as seed predators as they destroy soft melon seeds with their chewing teeth. Fruits of C. humifructus emit scent with a chemical profile distinct from that of related melon species. We argue that deep burial of fruits is a strategy that C. humifructus uses to escape from mammalian seed predators, particularly porcupines. This study highlights the potential role of escape from antagonistic interactions in the evolution of specialized seed dispersal mutualisms.
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spelling doaj-art-e54c57afa0fc45c9b1159d0e14250b762025-08-20T04:57:22ZengWileyPlants, People, Planet2572-26112025-09-01751225123410.1002/ppp3.10638Antbears and underground melons: A highly specialized seed dispersal mutualism mediated by scentSteven D. Johnson0Anka Eichhoff1Jeremy J. Midgley2Centre for Functional Biodiversity University of KwaZulu‐Natal Pietermaritzburg South AfricaVergenoeg Farm Okahandja District NamibiaDepartment of Biological Sciences University of Cape Town Cape Town South AfricaSocietal Impact Statement Seed dispersal is critical for the establishment and persistence of populations of most plant species. We investigated the seed dispersal biology of an African melon, Cucumis humifructus, which is closely related to cultivated cucumbers and watermelons but differs in that it buries its fruits deep underground. The fruits are located by antbears using olfaction; the antbears consume the fruit pulp and the seeds germinate in their faeces. Cucumis humifructus has become very rare in some parts of Africa and is vulnerable on account of its annual lifecycle combined with its dependence on a declining mammal species for establishing each new generation. Summary Seed dispersal mutualisms between plants and animals are seldom specialized at the species level. We investigated the highly unusual case of the dispersal of seeds of a melon Cucumis humifructus by the antbear (Orycteropus afer), a myrmecophagous African mammal. This annual plant buries its fruits c. 20 cm underground, a depth from which seedling emergence is impossible. We asked why the fruits are buried and how they are located by animals. We investigated the seed dispersal system of C. humifructus in central Namibia using camera traps, seed germination experiments and analyses of animal faeces. Coupled gas chromatography and mass spectrometry (GCMS) was used to analyse the chemistry of fruit scent. Naturally‐buried C. humifructus fruits were excavated solely by antbears. Antbear faecal pellets often contained intact C. humifructus seeds. All of the C. humifructus plants that we examined originated in antbear pellets. Fruits placed experimentally above ground or buried shallowly were eaten by porcupines which act as seed predators as they destroy soft melon seeds with their chewing teeth. Fruits of C. humifructus emit scent with a chemical profile distinct from that of related melon species. We argue that deep burial of fruits is a strategy that C. humifructus uses to escape from mammalian seed predators, particularly porcupines. This study highlights the potential role of escape from antagonistic interactions in the evolution of specialized seed dispersal mutualisms.https://doi.org/10.1002/ppp3.10638Cucumis humifructusCucurbitaceaeendozoochoryfrugivorymyrmecophagyOrycteropus afer
spellingShingle Steven D. Johnson
Anka Eichhoff
Jeremy J. Midgley
Antbears and underground melons: A highly specialized seed dispersal mutualism mediated by scent
Plants, People, Planet
Cucumis humifructus
Cucurbitaceae
endozoochory
frugivory
myrmecophagy
Orycteropus afer
title Antbears and underground melons: A highly specialized seed dispersal mutualism mediated by scent
title_full Antbears and underground melons: A highly specialized seed dispersal mutualism mediated by scent
title_fullStr Antbears and underground melons: A highly specialized seed dispersal mutualism mediated by scent
title_full_unstemmed Antbears and underground melons: A highly specialized seed dispersal mutualism mediated by scent
title_short Antbears and underground melons: A highly specialized seed dispersal mutualism mediated by scent
title_sort antbears and underground melons a highly specialized seed dispersal mutualism mediated by scent
topic Cucumis humifructus
Cucurbitaceae
endozoochory
frugivory
myrmecophagy
Orycteropus afer
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ppp3.10638
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AT ankaeichhoff antbearsandundergroundmelonsahighlyspecializedseeddispersalmutualismmediatedbyscent
AT jeremyjmidgley antbearsandundergroundmelonsahighlyspecializedseeddispersalmutualismmediatedbyscent