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够了就是够了:共生蚂蚁丰度对非洲金合欢草食性、生长和繁殖的影响。

Enough is enough: the effects of symbiotic ant abundance on herbivory, growth, and reproduction in an African acacia.

机构信息

Department of Biology, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611, USA.

出版信息

Ecology. 2013 Mar;94(3):683-91. doi: 10.1890/12-1413.1.

Abstract

Understanding how cooperative interactions evolve and persist remains a central challenge in biology. Many mutualisms are thought to be maintained by "partner fidelity feedback," in which each partner bases their investment on the benefits they receive. Yet, we know little about how benefits change as mutualists vary their investment, which is critical to understanding the balance between mutualism and antagonism in any given partnership. Using an obligate ant-plant mutualism, we manipulated the density of symbiotic acacia ants (Crematogaster mimosae) and examined how the costs and benefits to Acacia drepanolobium trees scaled with ant abundance. Benefits of ants to plants saturated with increasing ant abundance for protection from branch browsing by elephants and attack by branch galling midges, while varying linearly for protection from cerambycid beetles. In addition, the risk of catastrophic whole-tree herbivory by elephants was highest for trees with very low ant abundance. However, there was no relationship between ant abundance and herbivory by leaf-feeding invertebrates, nor by vertebrate browsers such as giraffe, steinbuck, and Grant's gazelle. Ant abundance did not significantly influence rates of branch growth on acacias, but there was a significant negative relationship between ant abundance and the number of fruits produced by host plants, suggesting that maintaining high-density ant colonies is costly. Because benefits to plants largely saturated with increasing colony size, while costs to plant reproduction increased, we suggest that ant colonies may achieve abundances that are higher than optimal for host plants. Our results highlight the conflicts of interest inherent in many mutualisms, and demonstrate the value of examining the shape of curves relating costs and benefits within these globally important interactions.

摘要

理解合作相互作用如何演变和持续是生物学中的一个核心挑战。许多互利共生关系被认为是通过“伙伴保真反馈”来维持的,即每个伙伴根据他们所获得的利益来决定自己的投资。然而,我们对互利共生体在改变投资时利益如何变化知之甚少,这对于理解任何特定伙伴关系中互利共生和拮抗作用之间的平衡至关重要。利用一种专性蚂蚁-植物互惠关系,我们操纵共生金合欢蚂蚁(Crematogaster mimosae)的密度,并研究了金合欢树(Acacia drepanolobium)的成本和收益如何随蚂蚁丰度的变化而变化。蚂蚁对植物的好处随着蚂蚁丰度的增加而饱和,以防止大象啃食树枝和枝状介壳虫的攻击,而对甲虫的保护则呈线性变化。此外,由于蚂蚁丰度极低,整棵树被大象灾难性地食草的风险最高。然而,蚂蚁丰度与食叶无脊椎动物的取食以及长颈鹿、羚牛和格兰特瞪羚等脊椎动物的取食之间没有关系。蚂蚁丰度对金合欢树的枝条生长速度没有显著影响,但蚂蚁丰度与寄主植物的果实数量之间存在显著的负相关关系,这表明维持高密度的蚁群是有代价的。由于植物的好处在很大程度上随着殖民地规模的增加而饱和,而植物繁殖的成本增加,我们认为蚂蚁殖民地的丰度可能高于宿主植物的最佳丰度。我们的研究结果突出了许多互利共生关系中固有的利益冲突,并证明了在这些具有全球重要意义的相互作用中,研究成本和收益之间关系曲线形状的价值。

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