Department of Biology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27607, USA.
Ann Bot. 2013 Jun;111(6):1295-307. doi: 10.1093/aob/mct082. Epub 2013 Apr 21.
In complex communities, organisms often form mutualisms with multiple different partners simultaneously. Non-additive effects may emerge among species linked by these positive interactions. Ants commonly participate in mutualisms with both honeydew-producing insects (HPI) and their extrafloral nectary (EFN)-bearing host plants. Consequently, HPI and EFN-bearing plants may experience non-additive benefits or costs when these groups co-occur. The outcomes of these interactions are likely to be influenced by variation in preferences among ants for honeydew vs. nectar. In this study, a test was made for non-additive effects on HPI and EFN-bearing plants resulting from sharing exotic ant guards. Preferences of the dominant exotic ant species for nectar vs. honeydew resources were also examined.
Ant access, HPI and nectar availability were manipulated on the EFN-bearing shrub, Morinda citrifolia, and ant and HPI abundances, herbivory and plant growth were assessed. Ant-tending behaviours toward HPI across an experimental gradient of nectar availability were also tracked in order to investigate mechanisms underlying ant responses.
The dominant ant species, Anoplolepis gracilipes, differed from less invasive ants in response to multiple mutualists, with reductions in plot-wide abundances when nectar was reduced, but no response to HPI reduction. Conversely, at sites where A. gracilipes was absent or rare, abundances of less invasive ants increased when nectar was reduced, but declined when HPI were reduced. Non-additive benefits were found at sites dominated by A. gracilipes, but only for M. citrifolia plants. Responses of HPI at these sites supported predictions of the non-additive cost model. Interestingly, the opposite non-additive patterns emerged at sites dominated by other ants.
It was demonstrated that strong non-additive benefits and costs can both occur when a plant and herbivore share mutualist partners. These findings suggest that broadening the community context of mutualism studies can reveal important non-additive effects and increase understanding of the dynamics of species interactions.
在复杂的群落中,生物通常会同时与多种不同的伙伴形成共生关系。这些正相互作用联系起来的物种之间可能会出现非加性效应。蚂蚁通常与产蜜昆虫(HPI)及其带额外花蜜腺(EFN)的寄主植物同时参与共生关系。因此,当这些群体共存时,HPI 和带 EFN 的植物可能会经历非加性的收益或成本。这些相互作用的结果很可能受到蚂蚁对蜜露与花蜜偏好的变化的影响。在这项研究中,测试了由于共享外来蚂蚁保护者而对 HPI 和带 EFN 的植物产生的非加性效应。还检查了占优势的外来蚂蚁物种对花蜜与蜜露资源的偏好。
在带 EFN 的灌木 Morinda citrifolia 上操纵蚂蚁的进入、HPI 和花蜜的可利用性,并评估蚂蚁和 HPI 的丰度、食草性和植物生长情况。还跟踪了蚂蚁在花蜜可用度的实验梯度上对 HPI 的照料行为,以研究蚂蚁反应的机制。
优势蚂蚁物种 Anoplolepis gracilipes 与入侵性较小的蚂蚁在对多种共生者的反应上存在差异,当花蜜减少时,整个样地的丰度减少,但对 HPI 减少没有反应。相反,在 A. gracilipes 缺席或稀少的地点,当花蜜减少时,入侵性较小的蚂蚁的丰度增加,但当 HPI 减少时,丰度下降。在 A. gracilipes 占主导地位的地点发现了非加性收益,但仅限于 M. citrifolia 植物。这些地点的 HPI 反应支持了非加性成本模型的预测。有趣的是,在其他蚂蚁占主导地位的地点出现了相反的非加性模式。
结果表明,当植物和食草动物共享共生伙伴时,强烈的非加性收益和成本都可能发生。这些发现表明,拓宽共生关系研究的社区背景可以揭示重要的非加性效应,并增加对物种相互作用动态的理解。