4.6 Article

Interactions between seed-dispersing ant species affect plant community composition in field mesocosms

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL ECOLOGY
Volume 89, Issue 11, Pages 2485-2495

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1365-2656.13310

Keywords

Aphaenogaster; invasive species; multispecies mutualism; mutualism; myrmecochory; Myrmica rubra; seed dispersal

Funding

  1. Ontario Ministry of Economic Development and Innovation
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  3. University of Toronto
  4. NSERC Undergraduate Student Research Award
  5. NSERC Canada Graduate Scholarship
  6. NSERC Discovery Grant

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In generalized mutualisms, species vary in the quality of services they provide to their partners directly via traits that affect partner fitness and indirectly via traits that influence interactions among mutualist species that play similar functional roles. Myrmecochory, or seed dispersal by ants, is a generalized mutualism with ant species varying in the quality of dispersal services they provide to their plant partners. Variation in ant species identity can directly impact seed dispersal patterns and plant community composition; however, we know less about how interactions among seed-dispersing ant species indirectly influence plant partners. The invasive antMyrmica rubra, is a high-quality seed-disperser in its native range that interacts with myrmecochores (ant-dispersed plants) and the high-quality seed disperserAphaenogastersp. in its invaded range. We use this system to examine how interactions between two functionally similar mutualist ant species influence the recruitment and community composition of ant-dispersed plants. We performed a field mesocosm experiment and a laboratory behavioural experiment to compare discovery and dominance behaviours between ant species, and seed dispersal and seedling recruitment of four myrmecochore species among intraspecific interaction treatments of each ant species and an interspecific interaction treatment. We found thatM. rubrawas better at discovering and dispersing seeds, butAphaenogastersp. was dominantly aggressive overM. rubra. Interspecific interactions dampened seed dispersal relative to dispersal by the better disperser. Despite this dampening, we found no effect of interspecific interactions on seedling recruitment. However, community composition of seedlings in the interspecific interaction treatment was more similar to composition in the aggressively dominant ant (Aphaenogastersp.) treatment than in the better discoverer antM. rubratreatment. We show that interspecific interactions between mutualist species in the same functional guild affect the outcome of mutualistic interactions with partner species. Despite the native ant dispersing fewer seeds, its dominance over the subordinate (invasive) ant has the potential to allow for some level of biotic resistance against the effects ofM. rubraon plant communities when these species coexist.

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