Lack of ant attendance may induce compensatory plant growth

被引:9
作者
Offenberg, J
Nielsen, MG
Macintosh, DJ
Havanon, S
Aksornkoae, S
机构
[1] Aarhus Univ, Inst Biol Sci, DK-8000 Aarhus, Denmark
[2] Ranong Mangrove Forest Res Ctr, Royal Forest Dept Thailand, Ranong 85000, Thailand
[3] Kasetsart Univ, Fac Forestry, Bangkok 10900, Thailand
关键词
D O I
10.1111/j.0030-1299.2005.13604.x
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Three levels in ant-plant protection systems need to be considered to fully understand how these symbiotic systems work. Here we present the effect of Oecophylla smaragdina ants on (1) the arthropod community, (2) herbivory, and (3) plant performance, within a studied mangrove ant-plant protection system. On Rhizophora mucronata trees in Thailand ants successfully colonised ant trees attached with a string to a natural ant tree, whereas they were unable to colonise control trees without this connection. Trees were monitored and arthropods (numbers and composition), leaf damage, leaf turnover and growth rates (stem diameter, tree height and total leaf area) were recorded in two surveys covering a period of 12 months. The number of herbivorous arthropods, but not the number of predators, was significantly lower on ant trees compared to control trees. Likewise, the amount of leaf damage inflicted by the four major groups of herbivores (Chrysomelidae, Tortricidae, Geometridae and Sesarminae) was significantly lower on ant trees compared to control trees and so was the leaf turnover rate. In spite of this, the released herbivore pressure on ant trees did not translate into higher growth rates. In contrast, all growth responses increased more on control trees compared to ant trees. Differences between the two groups were insignificant but leaf area increase was only marginally nonsignificant (P=0.062). The results show that ants remove herbivorous arthropods more efficiently than predators but ant-colonised mangroves do not necessarily benefit from this despite the resulting decrease in herbivory.
引用
收藏
页码:170 / 178
页数:9
相关论文
共 37 条
[1]   Dynamic anti-herbivore defense in ant-plants: the role of induced responses [J].
Agrawal, AA ;
Rutter, MT .
OIKOS, 1998, 83 (02) :227-236
[2]   SPATIAL VARIATION IN THE EFFECT OF ANTS ON AN EXTRAFLORAL NECTARY PLANT [J].
BARTON, AM .
ECOLOGY, 1986, 67 (02) :495-504
[3]  
BEATTIE A.J., 1985, The evolutionary ecology of ant-plant mutualisms
[4]   EXTRA-FLORAL NECTARIES AND PROTECTION BY PUGNACIOUS BODYGUARDS [J].
BENTLEY, BL .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF ECOLOGY AND SYSTEMATICS, 1977, 8 :407-427
[5]   The contribution of ant plant protection studies to our understanding of mutualism [J].
Bronstein, JL .
BIOTROPICA, 1998, 30 (02) :150-161
[6]   PRUNING OF HOST PLANT NEIGHBORS BY ANTS - AN EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH [J].
DAVIDSON, DW ;
LONGINO, JT ;
SNELLING, RR .
ECOLOGY, 1988, 69 (03) :801-808
[7]   Conditional outcomes in a neotropical treehopper-ant association: temporal and species-specific variation in ant protection and homopteran fecundity [J].
Del-Claro, K ;
Oliveira, PS .
OECOLOGIA, 2000, 124 (02) :156-165
[8]   A MODEL OF HERBIVORE FEEDBACK ON PLANT PRODUCTIVITY [J].
DYER, MI ;
DEANGELIS, DL ;
POST, WM .
MATHEMATICAL BIOSCIENCES, 1986, 79 (02) :171-184
[9]   SOME NEW, SIMPLE AND EFFICIENT STEREOLOGICAL METHODS AND THEIR USE IN PATHOLOGICAL RESEARCH AND DIAGNOSIS - REVIEW ARTICLE [J].
GUNDERSEN, HJG ;
BENDTSEN, TF ;
KORBO, L ;
MARCUSSEN, N ;
MOLLER, A ;
NIELSEN, K ;
NYENGAARD, JR ;
PAKKENBERG, B ;
SORENSEN, FB ;
VESTERBY, A ;
WEST, MJ .
APMIS, 1988, 96 (05) :379-394
[10]   RELATIVE GROWTH-RATES AND THE GRAZING OPTIMIZATION HYPOTHESIS [J].
HILBERT, DW ;
SWIFT, DM ;
DETLING, JK ;
DYER, MI .
OECOLOGIA, 1981, 51 (01) :14-18