4.5 Article

Arthropod facilitation mediated by abandoned dead domatia

Journal

ECOSPHERE
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.3323

Keywords

Arthropod diversity; Azteca pittieri; Cordia alliodora; Ecosystem engineering; microhabitat

Categories

Funding

  1. Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico (PAPIIT) [IN212714-3, IV200418]
  2. SAGARPA-CONACYT [291333]
  3. CONACYT-UNAM-UAGro to LANASE [2015-LN250996, 2016-LN271449, 2017-LN280505, 2018-LN293701, 2019-299033]
  4. Programa Iberoamericana de Ciencia y Tecnologia para el Desarrollo RED CYTED SEPODI [417RT0527]

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The mutualistic interaction between Azteca pittieri and Cordia alliodora promotes new habitats for arthropods through abandoned dead domatia. Ants are the most species-rich group in abandoned dead domatia, which serve as nesting sites for them. Secondary arthropod species richness, abundance, and colonization frequency are greater in dead domatia compared with live domatia.
In ant-plant mutualistic interactions, plants provide shelter (domatia) and/or food to ants and in exchange, and ants provide protection against herbivores. After plant tissue senescence, ants are expected to abandon dead domatia, leaving these empty spaces available for other arthropods. In this study, we tested for the role of the mutualistic interaction between Cordia alliodora and Azteca pittieri in promoting new habitats for arthropods through abandoned dead domatia. We predicted that species richness, abundance, and colonization frequency of secondary arthropods would be greater in dead branch domatia (dead domatia) compared with live branch domatia (live domatia). During March 2019, we selected 38 C. alliodora trees in a Mexican tropical dry forest. For each tree, we collected five live and five dead domatia, for 380 domatia in total. We found six morphospecies of secondary arthropods colonizing live domatia, while 42 were present in dead domatia. Ants were the most species-rich group (10 species) in abandoned dead domatia and utilized them as nesting sites (25 nests). Secondary arthropod species richness, abundance, and colonization frequency were greater in dead domatia compared with live domatia. We concluded that the Azteca-Cordia mutualistic interaction is an important habitat facilitator by promoting new habitats for arthropods through abandoned dead domatia.

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