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解析与蚂蚁共生的等足目动物的专性共生成本。

Dissecting the costs of a facultative symbiosis in an isopod living with ants.

机构信息

Terrestrial Ecology Unit (TEREC), Department of Biology, Ghent University, K.L. Ledeganckstraat 35, 9000, Ghent, Belgium.

Evolutionary Ecology Group, Department of Biology, Universiteit Antwerp, Universiteitsplein 1, 2610, Wilrijk, Belgium.

出版信息

Oecologia. 2022 Jun;199(2):355-366. doi: 10.1007/s00442-022-05186-9. Epub 2022 May 21.

Abstract

The balance between costs and benefits is expected to drive associations between species. While these balances are well understood for strict associations, we have no insights to which extent they determine facultative associations between species. Here, we quantified the costs of living in a facultative association, by studying the effects of red wood ants on the facultatively associated isopod Porcellio scaber. Porcellio scaber frequently occurred in and near hostile red wood ant nests and might outnumber obligate nest associates. The facultative association involved different costs for the isopod. We found that the density of the isopod decreases near the nest with higher ant traffic. Individuals in and near the nest were smaller than individuals further away from the nest. Smaller individuals were also found at sites with higher ant traffic. A higher proportion of wounded individuals was found closer to the nest and with higher ant traffic. We recorded pregnant females and juveniles in the nest suggesting that the life cycle can be completed inside the nests. Lab experiments showed that females died sooner and invested less in reproduction in presence of red wood ants. Porcellio scaber rarely provoked an aggression response, but large numbers were carried as prey to the nest. These preyed isopods were mainly dried out corpses. Our results showed that the ant association incurred several costs for a facultative associate. Consequently, red wood ant nests and their surrounding territory act as an alternative habitat where demographic costs are offset by a stable resource provisioning and protection.

摘要

成本与收益的平衡预计将推动物种之间的关联。虽然这些平衡对于严格的关联已经有了很好的理解,但我们还不清楚它们在多大程度上决定了物种之间的兼性关系。在这里,我们通过研究红树蚁对兼性相关的等足目 Porcellio scaber 的影响,量化了兼性关系的生活成本。Porcellio scaber 经常出现在和靠近敌对的红树蚁巢中,数量可能超过了必需的巢伴。兼性关系涉及到等足目动物的不同成本。我们发现,等足目动物的密度随着蚂蚁交通量的增加而在巢附近降低。巢内和附近的个体比远离巢的个体小。在蚂蚁交通量较高的地方也发现了较小的个体。靠近巢穴和蚂蚁交通量较高的地方,受伤个体的比例更高。我们在巢中记录了怀孕的雌性和幼体,表明生命周期可以在巢内完成。实验室实验表明,雌性在有红树蚁存在的情况下更早死亡,并且在繁殖方面的投资较少。Porcellio scaber 很少引发攻击反应,但大量个体被当作猎物带到巢中。这些被捕食的等足目动物主要是干尸。我们的研究结果表明,蚂蚁共生关系给兼性共生体带来了多种成本。因此,红树蚁巢及其周围的领地充当了替代栖息地,在这里,人口成本可以通过稳定的资源供应和保护来抵消。

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