4.4 Article

Lowering the density: ants associated with the myrmecophyte Tillandsia caput-medusae diminish the establishment of epiphytes

Journal

AOB PLANTS
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/aobpla/plab024

Keywords

Ant-plant interactions; plant establishment; plant-plant interactions; seed remotion

Funding

  1. Secretaria de Educacion Publica (Red de Sistematica y Ecologia de Comunidades Forestales y Cultivos 2009-2011)
  2. Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia [CAV-T 335691]

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Ants benefit myrmecophytic plants by defending them from herbivores and offering nutrients, while also potentially affecting the seed establishment of other plant species. In forests with higher ant diversity, myrmecophytic plants are more significantly impacted by seed removal by ants.
Ants benefit myrmecophytic plants by two main activities defending them from herbivores and offering nutrients. Ants' territorial defence behaviour also benefits their myrmecophytic plants; in the case of trees, this behaviour includes eliminating structural parasites (epiphytes and lianas). These benefits could also occur with myrmecophytic epiphytes by decreasing the abundance of competing epiphytes. In two subunits of a tropical dry forest in the centre of Mexico, we (i) recorded the diversity of ants associated with the myrmecophyte Tillandsia caput-medusae, and experimentally tested: (ii) the effect of the ants associated with the myrmecophyte in the removal of its seeds and the seeds of other sympatric non-myrmecophyte species of Tillandsia; and (iii) if seed remotion by ants corresponds with epiphyte load in the preferred (Bursera copallifera) and limiting phorophyte species (B. fagaroides, Ipomoea pauciflora and Sapium macrocarpum). In five trees per species, we tied seed batches of T. caput-medusae, T. hubertiana, T. schiedeana and T. recurvata. One seed batch was close, and the other far away from a T. caput-medusae with active ants. Between forest subunits, ant richness was similar, but diversity and evenness differed. Ants diminish seed establishment of all the Tillandsia species; this effect is stronger in the forest subunit with a large ant diversity, maybe because of ant competition. Seed remotion by ants is independent of phorophyte species identity. Although ants can provide benefits to T. caput-medusae, they also could be lowering their abundance.

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