Food source availability and interspecific dominance as structural mechanisms of ant-plant-hemipteran multitrophic networks.
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2016
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Resumo
Extrafloral nectar of plants and honeydew of
hemipterans is a food source extensively explored by ants.
Although basically a sugary liquid food, nectar and
honeydew are composed of different nutrients and offered
in distinct ways; thus, ants must interact differently with
plants and hemipterans. In this study we assessed the
availability and dominance of nectar of extrafloral nectaries
and honeydew of sap-sucking hemipterans (i.e., sugarbased
resources) as mechanisms regulating interaction
frequency and structuring ant-plant-hemipteran networks.
We studied 12 plant species (240 shrubs, 20 per species)
and 12 hemipteran species (240 aggregations, 20 per species)
that interacted with 26 ant species in an area of
Rupestrian Fields (Rocky Montane Savannah), Brazil. We
observed that the 7 ant species that collected honeydew
were a subset of the 25 ant species feeding on nectar, but
the highly interacted species Camponotus crassus was the
same for both subnetworks. The ant-plant subnetwork
exhibited a nested pattern of interaction with a low degree
of specialization, while the ant-hemipteran subnetwork
exhibited lower nestedness but higher specialization. We
found a positive relationship between the offer of EFNs
and the number of interactions with ants, probably resulting
from reduced competition in plants with high availability
of EFNs. However, hemipteran species that were most
abundant did not interact with more species of ants,
probably because of the numerical dominance of the species
tending all hemipteran aggregations, regardless of size.
However, segregation between ant species was higher than
expected by chance for both plants and hemipterans, con-
firming a deterministic factor (i.e., competition between ant
species) regulating the frequency of interactions. In summary,
the availability of ENFs seems to be an important
mechanism regulating ant-plant interactions, while
numerical dominance seems to be an important mechanism
structuring ant-hemipteran interactions.
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Palavras-chave
Dominance behavior, Resource partitioning, Specialization, Trophobiosies, Interspecific competition
Citação
FAGUNDES, R. et al. Food source availability and interspecific dominance as structural mechanisms of ant-plant-hemipteran multitrophic networks. Arthropod-Plant Interactions, v. 10, p. 207-220, 2016. Disponível em: <https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs11829-016-9428-x>. Acesso em: 10 jul. 2017.