Models of Some Ant-Plant Mutualisms

Abstract
Simple models of the mutualistic interaction between ants and the diaspores of some spring herbs (myrmecochory) predict that a stable, feasible equilibrium is unlikely. The 2-spp. model is expanded to examine the effects of a predator or competitor because, in nature, myrmecochorous herbs often suffer heavy seed predation from small rodents or compete with nonmyrmecochores. Low to moderate levels of predation stabilize mutualism that is unstable in isolation. Numerical simulations indicate that the locally stable equilibrium point attracts reasonable initial population sizes of the 3 spp. Competition between the myrmecochore and a nonmyrmecochore decreases the probability of a stable coexistence compared to the isolated mutualism. Many mutualisms may be stabilized, and not merely bounded by a 3rd spp. Predation is the most likely stabilizing interaction.