A castration parasite of an ant–plant mutualism
Open Access
- 7 March 1998
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Proceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences
- Vol. 265 (1394), 375-382
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.1998.0305
Abstract
Exploring the factors governing the maintenance and breakdown of cooperation between mutualists is an intriguing and enduring problem for evolutionary ecology, and symbioses between ants and plants can provide useful experimental models for such studies. Hundreds of tropical plant species have evolved structures to house and feed ants, and these ant–plant symbioses have long been considered classic examples of mutualism. Here, we report that the primary ant symbiont, Allomerus cf. demerarae, of the most abundant ant–plant found in south–east Peru, Cordia nodosa Lam., castrates its host plant. Allomerus workers protect new leaves and their associated domatia from herbivory, but destroy flowers, reducing fruit production to zero in most host plants. Castrated plants occupied by Allomerus provide more domatia for their associated ants than plants occupied by three species of Azteca ants that do not castrate their hosts. Allomerus colonies in larger plants have higher fecundity. As a consequence, Allomerus appears to benefit from its castration behaviour, to the detriment of C. nodosa. The C. nodosa–ant system exhibits none of the retaliatory or filtering mechanisms shown to stabilize cheating in other cooperative systems, and appears to persist because some of the plants, albeit a small minority, are inhabited by the three species of truly mutualistic Azteca ants.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Non-mutualistic yucca moths and their evolutionary consequencesNature, 1996
- Swimming ants and pitcher plants: a unique ant-plant interaction from BorneoJournal of Tropical Ecology, 1995
- Evolutionary History of the Symbiosis Between Fungus-Growing Ants and Their FungiScience, 1994
- Nitrogen reallocation and photosynthetic acclimation in response to partial shading in soybean plantsPhysiologia Plantarum, 1994
- Leucoagaricus basidiomata from a live nest of the leaf-cutting ant Atta cephalotesMycological Research, 1994
- Effects of Source-to-Sink Ratio on Carbohydrate Production and Senescence of Rice Flag Leaves during the Ripening Period.Japanese Journal of Crop Science, 1993
- Distinguishing mechanisms for the evolution of co-operationJournal of Theoretical Biology, 1991
- Code of Ant-Plant Mutualism Broken by ParasiteScience, 1990
- Photosynthate and Nitrogen Requirements for Seed Production by Various CropsScience, 1975
- The Evolution of Reciprocal AltruismThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1971