4.5 Article

Plants with extrafloral nectaries share indirect defenses and shape the local arboreal ant community

Journal

OECOLOGIA
Volume 201, Issue 1, Pages 73-82

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-022-05286-6

Keywords

Indirect defense; Facilitation; Mutualism; Nurse effect; Symbiosis; Tritrophic interaction

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Plants with extra-floral nectaries (EFNs) can share indirect defenses with neighboring plants by attracting mutualistic ants. Support plants with EFNs indirectly benefit EFN-bearing plants by sharing ant species composition. However, there were no differences in fruit production between the two groups of plants.
Associational resistance (AR) is a positive interaction in which a plant suffers less herbivore damage due to its association with a protective plant. Here, we evaluated whether plants with extra-floral nectaries (EFNs) can share indirect defenses with neighboring plants. We sampled 45 individuals of an EFN-bearing liana (Smilax polyantha) and recorded whether their support species had EFNs. In S. polyantha, we measured foliar herbivory and flower and fruit production. We examined the ant species composition and visitation of S. polyantha and whether they changed according to the supporting plant type (with or without EFNs). We experimentally determined whether S. polyantha supplemented with artificial nectaries could share indirect defenses with defenseless neighboring plants. Support plants with EFNs indirectly benefited S. polyantha by sharing mutualistic ant species. Smilax polyantha supported by plants with EFNs had a more specific ant species composition, a higher number of visiting ants and ant species richness, and exhibited nearly 3 times less foliar herbivory. However, we did not observe differences in fruit production between the two groups of S. polyantha. Finally, we observed that S. polyantha with artificial nectaries increased ant visitation on neighboring plants 2.5 times. We provide evidence that interspecific neighbors with EFNs can experience reciprocal benefits by sharing indirect defenses. Such local effects might escalate and affect the structure of plant communities.

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