9 resultados para myrmecophyte


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Ant-plant interactions often are mediated by extrafloral nectar (EFN) composition that may influence plant visitation by ants. Over a 300 km range in the Indian Western Ghats, we investigated the correlation between the EFN composition of the myrmecophytic ant-plant Humboldtia brunonis (Fabaceae) and the number and species of ants visiting EFN. EFN composition varied among H. brunonis populations and between plant organs (floral bud vs. young leaf EFN). In general, EFN was rich in sugars with small quantities of amino acids, especially essential amino acids, and had moderate invertase activity. In experiments at the study sites with sugar and amino acid solutions and with leaf or floral bud EFN mimics, dominant EFN-feeding ants differentiated between solutions as well as between mimics. The castration parasite Crematogaster dohrni (northern study site) was the least selective and did not exhibit any clear feeding preferences, while the largely trophobiont-tending non-protective Myrmicaria brunnea (middle study site) preferred higher sucrose concentrations and certain essential/non-essential amino acid mixtures. The mutualistic Technomyrmex albipes (southern study site) preferred sucrose over glucose or fructose solutions and consumed the leaf EFN mimic to a greater extent than the floral bud EFN mimic. This young leaf EFN mimic had low sugar concentrations, the lowest viscosity and sugar: amino acid ratio, was rich in essential amino acids, and appeared ideally suited to the digestive physiology of T. albipes. This preference for young leaf EFN may explain the greater protection afforded to young leaves than to floral buds by T. albipes, and may also help to resolve ant-pollinator conflicts. The differential response of dominant ants to sugar, amino acids, or solution viscosity suggests that plants can fine-tune their interactions with local ants via EFN composition. Thus, EFN can mediate local partner-choice mechanisms in ant-plant interactions.

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Protection-based ant-plant mutualisms may vary in strength due to differences in ant rewards, abundance of protective ants and herbivory pressure. We investigated geographical and temporal variation in host plant traits and herbivory pressure at five sites spanning the distribution range of the myrmecophyte Humboldtia brunonis (Fabaceae) in the Indian Western Ghats. Southern siteshad, onaverage, 2.4 times greater abundance of domatia-bearing individuals, 1.6 times greater extrafloral nectary numbers per leaf, 1.2 times larger extrafloral nectary sizes, 2.2 times greater extrafloral nectar (EFN) volumes and a two-fold increase in total amino acid and total sugar concentrations in EFN compared with northern sites. Astrong protection-based mutualismwith ants occurred at only one southern site where herbivory was highest, suggesting that investments in attracting ants correlate with anti-herbivore benefits gained from the presence of protective ants. Our results confirm a temporally stable north-south gradient in myrmecophytic traits in this ant-plant as several of these traits were re-sampled after a 5-y interval. However, the chemical composition of EFN varied at both spatial and short-term temporal scales suggesting that only repeated measurements of rewards such as EFN can reveal the real spectrum of trait variation in an ant-plant mutualistic system.

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1. How a symbiosis originates and is maintained are important evolutionary questions. Symbioses in myrmecophytes (plants providing nesting for ants) are believed to be maintained by protection and nutrients provided by specialist plant-ants in exchange for nesting spaces (called domatia) and nourishment offered by ant-plants. However, besides the benefits accrued from housing protective ants, the mechanisms contributing to the fitness advantages of bearing domatia have rarely been examined, especially because the domatia trait is usually constitutively expressed, and many myrmecophytes have obligate mutualisms with single ant species resulting in invariant conditions. 2. In the unspecialized ant-plant Humboldtia brunonis (Fabaceae) that offers extrafloral nectar to ants, only some plants produce domatia in the form of hollow internodes. These domatia have a self-opening slit making them more prone to interlopers and are occupied mostly by non-protective ants and other invertebrates, especially arboreal earthworms. The protection mutualism with ants is restricted in geographical extent, occurring only at a few sites in the southernmost part of this plant's range in the Western Ghats of India. 3. We examined nutrient flux from domatia residents to the plant using stable isotopes. We found that between 9% (earthworms) and 17% (protective or non-protective ants) of nitrogen of plant tissues nearest the domatium came from domatia inhabitants. Therefore, interlopers such as earthworms and non-protective ants contributed positively to the nitrogen budget of localized plant modules of this understorey tree. N-15-enriched feeding experiments with protective ants demonstrated that nutrients flowed from domatia inhabitants to nearby plant modules. Fruit set did not differ between paired hand-pollinated inflorescences on domatia and non-domatia bearing branches. This was possibly due to the nutrient flux from domatia to adjacent branches without domatia within localized modules. 4. This study has demonstrated the nutritive role of non-protective ants and non-ant invertebrates, hitherto referred to as interlopers, in an unspecialized myrmecophyte. Our study suggests that even before the establishment of a specialized ant-plant protection mutualism, nutritional benefits conferred by domatia inhabitants can explain the fitness benefits of bearing domatia, and thus the maintenance of a trait that facilitates the establishment of a specialized ant-plant symbiosis.

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Theory suggests that spatial structuring should select for intermediate levels of virulence in parasites, but empirical tests are rare and have never been conducted with castration (sterilizing) parasites. To test this theory in a natural landscape, we co

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Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde eine detaillierte phylogenetische Analyse der Ameisenpflanzen aus der Gattung Macaranga (Euphorbiaceae) und ihres verwandtschaftlichen Umfelds mit Hilfe von AFLP-Fingerprinting („amplified fragment length polymorphisms“) sowie vergleichender Analyse von mehreren nichtkodierenden Chloroplasten-DNA-Loci vorgenommen. Anhand dieser Untersuchungen sollten im Wesentlichen die folgenden Fragen geklärt werden: (1) Wie stellen sich die Verwandtschaftsverhältnisse zwischen den myrmekophytischen Macaranga-Sektionen Pachystemon, Winklerianae und Pruinosae dar? (2) Wie sind die einzelnen Arten dieser Sektionen miteinander verwandt? (3) Wie oft ist die Lebensweise ”Myrmekophytie” unabhängig voneinander entstanden? Gibt es Hinweise auf Reversionen? (4) Wo liegt genealogisch und auch geographisch der Ursprung der Symbiose zwischen den myrmekophytischen Macaranga-Arten und ihren Partnerameisen? (5) Welche Bedeutung spielen koevolutive Entwicklungen für das Macaranga-Crematogaster-Symbiosesystem? Ist Myrmekophytie im Sinne einer Schlüsselinnovation (Givnish, 1997) als Stimulus für eine adaptive Radiation zu betrachten? (1) Für die AFLP-Analyse wurden 108 Proben aus 43 Macaranga-Arten und 5 unbeschriebenen Morphospezies in die phylogenetische Untersuchung einbezogen. Auf der Basis von 426 Merkmalen wurden Phänogramme sowie Kladogramme rekonstruiert. Zur statistischen Absicherung wurden Bootstrap-Analysen durchgeführt und im Falle der Kladogramme darüber hinaus der „consistency“-Index bestimmt. Die AFLP-Datensätze wurden zusätzlich einer Hauptkomponentenanalyse unterzogen. Mit Hilfe der verschiedenen Untersuchungsmethoden konnten weitgehend übereinstimmende Gruppierungen bzw. evolutive Linien identifiziert werden. Die Sektionen Pachystemon und Pruinosae bilden eine jeweils gut gestützte monophyletische Gruppe. Beide sind vermutlich Schwestergruppen und damit gleich alt. Für die Monophylie der nur aus zwei Arten bestehenden Sektion Winklerianae ergab sich keine Unterstützung. Die Arten der Sektion Pruinosae sind im AFLP-Baum gut aufgelöst. Die nicht myrmekophytische M. gigantea sitzt dabei an der Basis und ist Schwestergruppe zu den myrmekophytischen Arten. Innerhalb der Sektion Pachystemon wurden mit Hilfe der AFLP-Analyse vier gut gestützte Gruppen identifiziert. Für die puncticulata-Gruppe konnte hier erstmals auf molekularer Ebene eine Zugehörigkeit zur Sekt. Pachystemon nachgewiesen werden. Der von Davies (2001) vorgenommene Ausschluss von M. recurvata aus der Sekt. Pachystemon konnte bestätigt werden. Die Verwandtschaftsbeziehungen einzelner Arten zueinander sind in den AFLP-Bäumen nicht aufgelöst. (2) Für die vergleichende Chloroplasten-Sequenzierung wurden nach Maßgabe der Sequenzvariabilität in Testsequenzierungen die Bereiche atpB-rbcL und psbI-trnS für die phylogenetische Untersuchung ausgewählt. Für die Chloroplasten-Phylogenie wurden für jeden Locus mehr als 100 Sequenzen analysiert. Neben 29 Pachystemon-Arten inkl. vier unbekannter Morphospezies, acht Pruinosae-Arten inkl. eines möglichen Hybriden und den beiden Arten der Sekt. Winklerianae wurden 22 weitere Macaranga- und 10 Mallotus-Arten in die Untersuchung einbezogen. Zwischen den südostasiatischen Arten bestanden nur geringe Sequenzunterschiede. Maximum-Parsimonie-Kladogramme wurden rekonstruiert und die Sequenzen der beiden Loci wurden sowohl einzeln, als auch kombiniert ausgewertet. Indels wurden kodiert und als separate Merkmalsmatrix an die Sequenzdaten angehangen. Innerhalb von Macaranga konnten nur wenige abgesicherte Gruppen identifiziert werden. Deutlich war die Zusammengehörigkeit der afrikanischen Arten und ihr Entstehung aus den südostasiatischen Arten. Die von Davies (2001) der Sektion Pruinosae zugeordnete M. siamensis steht deutlich außerhalb dieser Sektion. Die Arten der Sektionen Pruinosae, Pachystemon und Winklerianae bilden keine statistisch gesicherten monophyletischen Gruppen. Während der Pilotstudien stellte sich heraus, dass die Chloroplastensequenzen nahe verwandter Arten der Sektion Pachystemon weniger nach den Artgrenzen, sondern vielmehr nach geographischen Kriterien gruppierten. (3) Es wurde daher zusätzlich eine phylogeographische Analyse der Chloroplasten-Sequenzen auf der Basis eines Parsimonie-Netzwerks durchgeführt. Neben dem atpB-rbcL-Spacer und einer Teilsequenze des psbI-trnS-Locus (ccmp2) wurde dafür zusätzlich der ccmp6-Locus (ein Abschnitt des ycf3-Introns) sequenziert. Die phylogeographische Untersuchung wurde mit 144 Proben aus 41 Macaranga-Arten durchgeführt. Darin enthalten waren 29 Arten (inkl. vier Morphospezies) mit 112 Proben der Sektion Pachystemon, sieben 7 Arten (inkl. eines potentiellen Hybriden) mit 22 Proben der Sekt. Pruinosae und zwei Arten mit 5 Proben der Sekt. Winklerianae. Das voll aufgelöste statistische Parsimonie-Netzwerk umfasste 88 Haplotypen. Die Sektionen Pachystemon und Pruinosae bilden jeweils eine monophyletische Gruppe. Das geographische Arrangement der Haplotypen unabhängig von der Artzugehörigkeit könnte durch Introgression und/oder „lineage sorting“ bedingt sein. Mit Hilfe der im Rahmen dieser Arbeit gewonnenen Ergebnisse kann man davon ausgehen, dass eine enge Ameisen-Pflanzen-Symbiose innerhalb der Gattung Macaranga mindestens drei-, möglicherweise viermal unabhängig voneinander entstanden ist Eine Reversion hat mindestens einmal, möglicherweise häufiger in der bancana-Gruppe stattgefunden. Ob sich die Symbiose dabei in Westmalaysia oder in Borneo entwickelt hat, kann man nicht sicher sagen; Ob und inwieweit die große Artenzahl in der bancana-Gruppe als eine Folge der Myrmekophytie anzusehen ist, bleibt zunächst offen. Wesentliche Teile der vorliegenden Arbeit liegen bereits in publizierter Form vor (AFLP-Analyse: Bänfer et al. 2004; Chloroplasten-Analyse: Vogel et al. 2003; Bänfer et al. 2006).

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Myrmecophyte plants house ants in domatia in exchange for protection from herbivores. Ant-myrmecophyte mutualisms exhibit two general patterns due to competition between ants for plant occupancy: i) domatia nest-sites are a limiting resource and ii) each individual plant hosts one ant species at a time. However, individual camelthorn trees (Vachellia erioloba) typically host two to four ant species simultaneously, often coexisting in adjacent domatia on the same branch. Such fine-grain spatial coexistence brings into question the conventional wisdom on ant-myrmecophyte mutualisms. Camelthorn ants appear not to be nest-site limited, despite low abundance of suitable domatia, and have random distributions of nest-sites within and across trees. These patterns suggest a lack of competition between ants for domatia and contrast strongly with other ant-myrmecophyte systems. Comparison of this unusual case with others suggests that spatial scale is crucial to coexistence or competitive exclusion involving multiple ant species. Furthermore, coexistence may be facilitated when co-occurring ant species diverge strongly on at least one niche axis. Our conclusions provide recommendations for future ant-myrmecophyte research, particularly in utilising multispecies systems to further our understanding of mutualism biology.

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The aggressive behavior of ants that protect plants from herbivores in exchange for rewards such as shelter or food is thought to be an important form of biotic defense against herbivory, particularly in tropical systems. To date, however, no one has compared the defensive responses of different ant taxa associated with the same plant species, and attempted to relate these differences to longer-term efficacy of ant defense. We used experimental cues associated with herbivory-physical damage and extracts of chemical volatiles from leaf tissue-to compare the aggressive responses of two ant species obligately associated with the Amazonian myrmecophyte Tococa bullifera (Melastomataceae). We also conducted a colony removal experiment to quantify the level of resistance from herbivores provided to plants by each ant species. Our experiments demonstrate that some cues eliciting a strong response from one ant species elicited no response by the other. For cues that do elicit responses, the magnitude of these responses can vary interspecifically. These patterns were consistent with the level of resistance provided from herbivores to plants. The colony removal experiment showed that both ant species defend plants from herbivores: however, herbivory was higher on plants colonized by the less aggressive ant species. Our results add to the growing body of literature indicating defensive ant responses are stimulated by cues associated with herbivory. However, they also suggest the local and regional variation in the composition of potential partner taxa could influence the ecology and evolution of defensive mutualisms in ways that have previously remained unexplored.

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The species combinations of myrmecophytic plants were compared in three different, neighboring local central Amazon forest sites. The proportional contribution of myrmecophytes in each setting varied significantly, with Maieta guainensis being the most abundant in each locality. This pattern resulted in low site similarity values. Other recorded species were Hirtella physophora, Tachigalia myrmecophila, Duroia sp., Tococa sp., and Cordia nodosa. Little variability was found with respect to associated ants that inhabited the myrmecophytes, and mutual entropies indicated a high degree of mutualistic interactions. However, for the majority of myrmecophytes, no differences in herbivore damage levels could be attributed to the presence of ants, with only M. guianensis and T. myrmecophila demonstrating significantly lower damages when inhabited by ants. Their respective ant associates, Pheidole minitula and Pseudomyrmex concolor, were thus the only plant-ants with a demonstrable ability to reduce the levels of herbivory in their host plant.

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We assessed how the abundance of ant-tended Hemiptera associated with two Amazonian myrmecophytes, Tococa bullifera and Maieta guianensis, varied as a function of resident ant species. We collected five species or morpho-species of adult hemiptera in the domatia of M. guianensis, with four of these species also found in Tococa bullifera. Maieta guianensis plants inhabited by Crematogaster laevis had over four-fold more hemiptera in them than plants inhabited by Pheidole minutula. In contrast, the density of hemiptera in Tococa bullifera domatia was independent of the species of ant resident. For each of the two ant species inhabiting Maieta guianensis, there was a positive and significant relationship between the abundance of hemiptera and workers inhabiting a plant. This relationship was also significant and positive for the Tococa bullifera plants inhabited by C. laevis. However, there was no relationship between Azteca worker and hemipteran density, although there was a trend towards a positive relationship. Our results indicate that hemipteran abundance can vary significantly between different myrmecophyte species, but that the nature of this relationship is mediated by the identity of the ant associate. Because hemipterans are herbivores, the costs and benefits of different ant partners to the host plant may vary in ways that are often overlooked.