Article

Protection from herbivores varies among ant genera for the myrmecophilic plant Leea aculeata in Malaysian Borneo

Details

Citation

Burger HF, Vondrackova K, Sklodowski M, Koid Q, Dent DH, Wallace K & Fayle TM (2021) Protection from herbivores varies among ant genera for the myrmecophilic plant Leea aculeata in Malaysian Borneo. Asian Myrmecology, 14, Art. No.: e014002. https://doi.org/10.20362/am.014002

Abstract
Some plants use food bodies to attract ants that then provide protection from herbivory. A brief report from 1898 describes the myrmecophilic plant Leea aculeata Bl. as bearing food bodies on its young shoots, which accumulate when they are not harvested by ants. However, ant efficacy in deterring herbivores and consequences for herbivory rates remain unknown. Here we investigate (1) which ant taxa patrol these plants and whether they remove significant numbers of food bodies, (2) if these ants attack herbivores, and (3) if any anti-herbivore activity correlates negatively with herbivory. We found that a diverse community of ants patrolled young L. aculeata shoots and removed food bodies (1.2 food body per cm2 per 24 h), with food bodies accumulating when ants are experimentally excluded. Attack rates on surrogate herbivores (termite baits) differed among ant genera, with Crematogaster and Lophomyrmex being most active. Although herbivory did not differ among ant genera, herbivory was greater when ants took a longer time to detect herbivores and recruit fellow ants, providing evidence for the mutualism of L. aculeata with ants. However, the variation in protection among ant genera raises questions regarding the stability of this mutualism in the face of exploitation by ants.

Keywords
myrmecophily; mutualism; food bodies; herbivory; Leea

Journal
Asian Myrmecology: Volume 14

StatusPublished
FundersThe British Ecological Society
Publication date31/12/2021
Publication date online20/03/2021
Date accepted by journal20/03/2021
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/34034
ISSN1985-1944
eISSN2462-2362