Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, University of Toronto, 25 Willcocks Street, Toronto, Ontario M5S 3B2, Canada.
Department of Organismic & Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, 26 Oxford Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA.
Ecology. 2017 Dec;98(12):3141-3151. doi: 10.1002/ecy.2036.
Many arboreal ants depend on myrmecophytic plants for both food and shelter; in return, these ants defend their host plants against herbivores, which are often insects. Ant-plant and other mutualisms do not necessarily involve the exchange of costly rewards or services; they may instead result from by-product benefits, or positive outcomes that do not entail a cost for one or both partners. Here, we examined whether the plant-ant Allomerus octoarticulatus pays a short-term cost to defend their host plants against herbivores, or whether plant defense is a by-product benefit of ant foraging for insect prey. Because the food offered by ant-plants is usually nitrogen-poor, arboreal ants may balance their diets by consuming insect prey or associating with microbial symbionts to acquire nitrogen, potentially shifting the costs and benefits of plant defense for the ant partner. To determine the effect of ant diet on an ant-plant mutualism, we compared the behavior, morphology, fitness, stable isotope signatures, and gaster microbiomes of A. octoarticulatus ants nesting in Cordia nodosa trees maintained for nearly a year with or without insect herbivores. At the end of the experiment, ants from herbivore exclosures preferred protein-rich baits more than ants in the control (i.e., herbivores present) treatment. Furthermore, workers in the control treatment were heavier than in the herbivore-exclusion treatment, and worker mass predicted reproductive output, suggesting that foraging for insect prey directly increased ant colony fitness. The gaster microbiome of ants was not significantly affected by the herbivore exclusion treatment. We conclude that the defensive behavior of some phytoecious ants is a by-product of their need for external protein sources; thus, the consumption of insect herbivores by ants benefits both the ant colony and the host plant.
许多树栖蚂蚁依赖于蚁栖植物来获取食物和庇护所;作为回报,这些蚂蚁会保护它们的宿主植物免受草食性动物的侵害,而这些草食性动物通常是昆虫。蚁栖植物和其他互利共生关系不一定涉及昂贵的回报或服务的交换;相反,它们可能是副产品利益的结果,或者对一方或双方都没有成本的积极结果。在这里,我们研究了植物蚂蚁 Allomerus octoarticulatus 是否会为保护其宿主植物免受草食性动物侵害而付出短期代价,或者植物防御是否是蚂蚁觅食昆虫猎物的副产品利益。由于蚁栖植物提供的食物通常氮含量较低,树栖蚂蚁可能通过食用昆虫猎物或与微生物共生体共生来获取氮来平衡其饮食,这可能会改变蚂蚁伴侣植物防御的成本和收益。为了确定蚂蚁饮食对蚁栖植物共生关系的影响,我们比较了在近一年的时间里,在有无昆虫食草动物的情况下,栖息在 Cordia nodosa 树上的 Allomerus octoarticulatus 蚂蚁的行为、形态、适应性、稳定同位素特征和腹部微生物组。在实验结束时,来自食草动物围栏的蚂蚁比对照(即存在食草动物)处理中的蚂蚁更喜欢富含蛋白质的诱饵。此外,对照处理中的工蚁比食草动物排除处理中的工蚁更重,而工蚁的体重预测了繁殖产量,这表明觅食昆虫直接增加了蚂蚁种群的适应性。蚂蚁的腹部微生物组不受食草动物排除处理的显著影响。我们得出的结论是,一些植食性蚂蚁的防御行为是它们需要外部蛋白质来源的副产品;因此,蚂蚁对昆虫食草动物的消耗既有益于蚂蚁群体,也有益于宿主植物。