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Journal ArticleDOI

Redispersal of seeds by a keystone ant augments the spread of common wildflowers

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TLDR
A novel seed-tracking technique is used to quantify secondary dispersal of seeds from the nest into the surrounding leaf litter by the keystone seed-dispersing ant, Aphaenogaster rudis, and suggests myrmecochory benefits plants in eastern North American forests by increasing the distance between the seed and parent plant and reducing competition among siblings.
Abstract
Myrmecochory (dispersal of seeds by ants) is an evolutionarily and ecologically common mutualism. Most of the research on the costs and benefits of myrmecochory in North America assumes that ant-dispersed seeds are taken to, and left in, the ant nest. Here, we use a novel seed-tracking technique to quantify secondary dispersal of seeds from the nest into the surrounding leaf litter by the keystone seed-dispersing ant, Aphaenogaster rudis. We found that A. rudis redispersed >90% of the seeds it took into its nest an average distance of 51.5 cm. A mathematical model shows redispersal increases the rate of population spread of the myrmecochores Hexastylis arifolia and Asarum canadense by 22.5%, and increases the expected cumulative dispersal distance away from the parent plant by 24%. Our results suggest myrmecochory benefits plants in eastern North American forests by increasing the distance between the seed and parent plant and reducing competition among siblings.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Impacts of the Invasive European Red Ant (Myrmica rubra (L.): Hymenoptera; Formicidae) on a Myrmecochorous System in the Northeastern United States.

TL;DR: The data suggest no long-term deleterious effects of M. rubra's invasion on diaspore dispersal in the Maine plant community that is comprised of both native and invasive species, implying that M. Rubra benefits from the myrmechorous plant species' diaspores by increasing their dispersal range away from the parent plant and potentially reducing seed predation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Plant pathogenic fungi decrease in soil inhabited by seed-dispersing ants

TL;DR: Reduced phytopathogenic fungi presence and richness in soils containing ant colonies as compared to nearby control soils indicating that the presence of ant colonies was concomitant with a reduction in plant pathogens.
Journal ArticleDOI

Overall seed dispersal effectiveness is lower in endemic Trillium species than in their widespread congeners

TL;DR: Endemic Trillium species had lower overall SDE than did their widespread congeners, adding to the list of ecological and demographic challenges that face endemic plants when compared to common congeners.
Journal ArticleDOI

An automated method for large-scale monitoring of seed dispersal by ants.

TL;DR: It is found that all retrieved seeds are rejected from the nest in a clustered pattern, and, surprisingly, they are also frequently redispersed within the arena afterwards, despite lacking elaiosome, suggesting that the dispersal pattern might be more complex and dynamic than expected.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Demography and dispersal: calculation and sensitivity analysis of invasion speed for structured populations

TL;DR: A discrete-time model for biological invasions is constructed that couples matrix population models (for population growth) with integrodifference equa- tions (for dispersal), and it is found that, when dispersal contains both long- and short-distance components, it is the long-distance component that governs the invasion speed-even when long- distance dispersal is rare.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seed dispersal and the holocene migration of woodland herbs

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the long-term spread of the understory herb Asarum canadense by ants and found that the largest distance ants are known to move the seeds of any woodland herb is up to 35 m.

Seed dispersal by white-tailed deer: implications for long-distance dispersal, invasion, and migration of plants

TL;DR: It is concluded that white-tailed deer represent a significant and previously unappreciated vector of seed dispersal across the North American landscape, probably contributing an important long-distance component to the seed shadows of hundreds of plant species, and providing a mechanism to help explain rapid rates of plant migration.
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Seed dispersal by white-tailed deer: implications for long-distance dispersal, invasion, and migration of plants in eastern North America

TL;DR: The authors investigated the potential for white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus Zimm), the dominant large herbivore in much of eastern North America, to disperse seeds via endozoochory.
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Myrmecochory in viola: dynamics of seed-ant interactions in some west virginia species

TL;DR: There was no evidence of specialization of particular ant species on particular Viola species, and the advantage of ant dispersal is relocation to a 'safe site' for germination, thus reducing predation, increasing germination stimuli, and increasing the available supply of nutrients.
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