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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

Mutualism between co-introduced species facilitates invasion and alters plant community structure

TL;DR: It is shown that strongly interacting introduced mutualism-related traits between native and invasive species however, can exacerbate the spread of invasive species (‘invasional meltdown’) if invasive partners strongly interact.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ant-mediated seed dispersal in a warmed world.

TL;DR: The results suggest that while temperature may play a role in regulating seed removal by ants, ant plant seed-dispersal mutualisms may be more robust to climate change than currently assumed.
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Seed handling behaviours of native and invasive seed-dispersing ants differentially influence seedling emergence in an introduced plant

TL;DR: Handling by ants may be a benefit of myrmecochory and favourable nest conditions may enhance emergence, and functional differences in ant species may result in different outcomes for plant partners.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multiphase myrmecochory: the roles of different ant species and effects of fire.

TL;DR: It is shown that myrmecochory can involve more than one dispersal phase and that fire indirectly influences myrmicochory by altering the abundances of seed-dispersing ants.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seed Dispersal Distances by Ants Increase in Response to Anthropogenic Disturbances in Australian Roadside Environments

TL;DR: Investigating the extent to which dispersal services by ants are influenced by anthropogenic disturbances associated with roadwork activities in southern NSW, Australia shows that myrmecochory is an unevenly diffuse mutualism, where few ant species contributed to much of the dispersal of seeds.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Choosing benefits or partners: a review of the evidence for the evolution of myrmecochory

TL;DR: It is argued that focusing future research on the evolution of partner choice by myrmecochores and its effects on the overall plant fitness will be more fruitful than putting an emphasis on classifying the selective advantage to plants into distinct categories and test for their existence separately.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seed Predation by Rodents on Three Ant-Dispersed Plants

E. Raymond Heithaus
- 01 Feb 1981 - 
TL;DR: Increasing the delectability of seeds through adding olfactory cues or doubling seed number per depot did not increase the frequency of predation, because mice were able to locate depots without these additional cues.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dispersal of trillium seeds by deer: implications for long-distance migration of forest herbs

TL;DR: This work shows that viable seeds of Trillium grandiflorum, an ant-dispersed forest herb in eastern North America, are dispersed via ingestion and defecation by white-tailed deer, providing a mechanism of long-distance dispersal that has likely contributed to rates of post-glacial migration and post-agricultural forest colonization.
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Convergent evolution of seed dispersal by ants, and phylogeny and biogeography in flowering plants: A global survey

TL;DR: The taxonomic, phylogenetic and biogeographic distribution of myrmecochory in flowering plants is reviewed and it is shown that myrmicochory has evolved in most of the major angiosperm lineages and that it is more frequent in younger families (crown group age) than in older families.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Guild of Myrmecochores in the Herbaceous Flora of West Virginia Forests

Andrew J. Beattie, +1 more
- 01 Feb 1981 - 
TL;DR: Analysis of herbaceous vegetation and ant activity in random quadrats from 10 forest sites in West Virginia, USA, shows that ant-dispersed plant species constitute about 30% of the herbaceous flora.
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