| Literature DB >> 28307492 |
Diane Wagner1, Carlos Martínez Del Rio1.
Abstract
In a previous laboratory study, larvae of the ant-tended lycaenid butterfly Hemiargus isola developed into larger adults when reared with the ant Formica perpilosa than when reared without ants. Ants neither fed butterfly larvae nor significantly delayed developmental duration. We investigated two non-exclusive hypotheses for the mechanism of this effect: larvae tended by F. perpilosa (1) consume more food, and (2) digest the food they consume more efficiently, than those reared without ants. Larvae reared in the laboratory with F. perpilosa ants became significantly heavier adults but produced a significantly lighter fecal mass than their untended counterparts, suggesting that greater food consumption was not the primary mechanism for the higher growth rates of ant-tended larvae. Tended and untended larvae were equally proficient at digesting the contents of pollen (a major natural food source) throughout the tended portion of the life cycle. Taken together, the results suggest that neither greater consumption nor higher assimilation accounts for the larger size of F. perpilosa-tended larvae. We propose that tended larvae may expend less energy than their untended counterparts.Entities:
Keywords: Digestion; Formica perpilosa; Growth; Hemiargus isola; Key words Ant tending
Year: 1997 PMID: 28307492 DOI: 10.1007/s004420050328
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oecologia ISSN: 0029-8549 Impact factor: 3.225