| Literature DB >> 21203550 |
Matthew D Trager1, Smriti Bhotika, Jeffrey A Hostetler, Gilda V Andrade, Mariano A Rodriguez-Cabal, C Seabird McKeon, Craig W Osenberg, Benjamin M Bolker.
Abstract
Costs and benefits for partners in mutualistic interactions can vary greatly, but surprisingly little is known about the factors that drive this variation across systems. We conducted a meta-analysis of ant-plant protective mutualisms to quantify the effects of ant defenders on plant reproductive output, to evaluate if reproductive effects were predicted from reductions in herbivory and to identify characteristics of the plants, ants and environment that explained variation in ant protection. We also compared our approach with two other recent meta-analyses on ant-plant mutualisms, emphasizing differences in our methodology (using a weighted linear mixed effects model) and our focus on plant reproduction rather than herbivore damage. Based on 59 ant and plant species pairs, ant presence increased plant reproductive output by 49% and reduced herbivory by 62%. The effects on herbivory and reproduction within systems were positively correlated, but the slope of this relationship (0.75) indicated that tolerance to foliar herbivory may be a common plant response to absence of ant guards. Furthermore, the relationship between foliar damage and reproduction varied substantially among systems, suggesting that herbivore damage is not a reliable surrogate for fitness consequences of ant protection. Studies that experimentally excluded ants reported a smaller effect of ant protection on plant reproduction than studies that relied upon natural variation in ant presence, suggesting that study methods can affect results in these systems. Of the ecological variables included in our analysis, only plant life history (i.e., annual or perennial) explained variation in the protective benefit of mutualistic ants: presence of ants benefitted reproduction of perennials significantly more than that of annuals. These results contrast with other quantitative reviews of these relationships that did not include plant life history as an explanatory factor and raise several questions to guide future research on ant-plant protection mutualisms.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21203550 PMCID: PMC3008678 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0014308
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Plant, ant, environmental, and study characteristics included in the meta-analysis, and hypotheses related to the potential effects of those variables.
| Variable | Type (values) | Hypotheses |
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| Life history | Categorical (annual or perennial) | Annual plants will benefit less from ant defense than perennial plants because the annuals should invest less in defense |
| Domatia | Categorical (present or absent) | Plants that produce domatia will benefit more from ant presence |
| Location of extrafloral nectaries (EFN) | Categorical (vegetative or reproductive) | The functions of EFN on reproductive structures differ among systems: 1. ants visiting such EFN could deter pollinators, thereby reducing reproductive output |
| Honeydew-producing trophobionts | Categorical (present or absent) | May be costly to the plant |
| Growth form | Categorical (herb, shrub, tree, vine, epiphyte, cactus) | No a priori hypothesis regarding direct effects, although growth form may be correlated with plant reward structure or life history to influence ant protection. |
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| Species diversity | Continuous (1/n) | Protective benefits of ants will decrease with the number of ant species associated with plant species |
| Subfamily of most abundant ant | Categorical | No a priori hypothesis, but phylogenetic covariates could affect mutualism function |
| Size of most abundant ant | Continuous (body length in mm) | Large ants will confer greater protective benefits, at least for myrmecophilic plants that do not produce domatia (reviewed in |
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| Habitat type | Categorical (forest, open, desert/beach) | No a priori hypothesis; included primarily to test in interaction with precipitation to more specifically indicate abiotic factors. |
| Mean annual precipitation | Continuous (mm) | Herbivore pressure is stronger in tropical forests |
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| Study type | Categorical (experimental or observational) | No a priori hypothesis, but differences in design could influence derived effect sizes. |
Figure 1Effect sizes (means ±95% confidence intervals) for responses of (A) plant reproduction and (B) herbivore damage to ant presence, ordered by magnitude.
For both panels, the solid line indicates no effect (log-ratio = 0) and the dashed line indicates the weighted mean effect size. Circles represent observational studies and triangles represent experimental studies; note that the y-axis scales are different for (A) and (B).
Figure 2Relationship between the effect sizes for herbivory and reproductive output.
Means (±95% CI) for both effect sizes are presented for the 19 studies that contained data on both herbivore damage and reproductive output. The dashed line indicates a hypothetical 1∶1 relationship; the solid line indicates the observed relationship (see Equation 5 for weighted correlation procedure). The slope of the relationship was significantly less than 1 (Maximum Likelihood Estimate = 0.75, 95% CI = 0.71 to 0.79).
Figure 3Benefits of ant presence varied according to plant life history and presence/absence of domatia.
Predicted mean percent changes (±1 SE) in reproductive output when ants are present for the three combinations of domatia production and life history present in the dataset. Effects of domatia and life history combinations are population marginal means averaged over the effects of observational and experimental studies. Letters indicate significant pairwise differences (p<0.05) between groups based on Tukey's post-hoc multiple comparisons of means.