| Literature DB >> 28888051 |
Elizabeth G Pringle1,2,3, Ian Ableson3, Jennifer Kerber3, Rachel L Vannette4, Leiling Tao5.
Abstract
Predictable effects of resource availability on plant growth-defense strategies provide a unifying theme in theories of direct anti-herbivore defense, but it is less clear how resource availability modulates plant indirect defense. Ant-plant-hemipteran interactions produce mutualistic trophic cascades when hemipteran-tending ants reduce total herbivory, and these interactions are a key component of plant indirect defense in most terrestrial ecosystems. Here we conducted an experiment to test how ant-plant-hemipteran interactions depend on nitrogen (N) availability by manipulating the presence of ants and aphids under different N fertilization treatments. Ants increased plant flowering success by decreasing the densities of herbivores, and the effects of ants on folivores were positively related to the density of aphids. Unexpectedly, N fertilization produced no changes in plant N concentrations. Plants grown in higher N grew and flowered more, but aphid honeydew chemistry stayed the same, and neither the density of aphids nor the rate of ant attraction per aphid changed with N addition. The positive effects of ants and N addition on plant fitness were thus independent of one another. We conclude that N was the plant's limiting nutrient and propose that addition of the limiting nutrient is unlikely to alter the strength of mutualistic trophic cascades.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990Aphis neriizzm321990; zzm321990Asclepias incarnatazzm321990; zzm321990Formica obscuripeszzm321990; Law of the Minimum; ant-plant mutualism; ecological stoichiometry; honeydew; resource availability; trophic cascade
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28888051 DOI: 10.1002/ecy.2013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecology ISSN: 0012-9658 Impact factor: 5.499