4.4 Article

Ant preference for seeds without awns increases removal of exotic relative to native grass seeds

Journal

ECOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY
Volume 46, Issue 2, Pages 500-503

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/een.12980

Keywords

Ant‐ plant interactions; Australian grasslands; dyszoochory; plant invasion; seed dispersal

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP150101839]
  2. University of Canberra
  3. University of New England Postdoctoral Fellowship

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The removal of seeds by granivorous ants can affect plant recruitment, with variation in ant selection preferences influencing patterns of seed removal and plant community composition. A seed removal experiment showed that seeds of exotic species without awns were removed at a higher rate by ants than native species with awns. Additionally, differences in removal rates aligned with differences in spatial spread in a seed addition experiment, suggesting a role for ants in dispersing exotic seeds.
1. The removal of seeds by granivorous ants can affect plant recruitment through either seed loss from predation or the dispersal and recruitment of seeds that are removed but not consumed. Consequently, variation in ant selection preferences can influence patterns of seed removal and affect plant community composition, including the spread of exotic plant species. 2. We conducted a seed removal experiment to determine whether: 1) rates of removal by ants differed between three native and three exotic grass species in an Australian temperate grassland; and 2) differences in removal rates were associated with the presence or absence of awns. 3. We found that seeds of the three exotic species, none of which had awns, were removed by ants at a higher rate than those of the three native species, all of which had awns. Removal rates of native species increased when awns were manually removed, suggesting the awns of native species acted as a removal barrier. 4. While we do not know the fate of seeds removed from our experiment, differences among species in removal rates mirrored differences in their spatial spread in a separate seed addition experiment. Exotic species removed by ants at a higher rate in the removal experiment had more widely dispersed seedlings than native species in the seed addition experiment, potentially indicating a role for granivorous ants in dispersing exotic seeds. Identifying ant selection preferences and directly linking removal to seed fate could help explain how exotic grass species move around the landscape.

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