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Journal ArticleDOI

Uncommon specialization in a mutualism between a temperate herbaceous plant guild and an ant: are Aphaenogaster ants keystone mutualists?

J. H. Ness, +2 more
- 01 Dec 2009 - 
- Vol. 118, Iss: 12, pp 1793-1804
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TLDR
The meta-analysis demonstrated that A. rudis is the primary seed dispersal vector for most of this rich temperate ant-dispersed flora, and the low levels of plant partner diversity for myrmecochores demonstrated here rivals that of tropical ant-plants (myrmecophytes) and well exceeds that typically observed in temperate plant-frugivore and plant-pollinator mutualisms and myRMecochory in other biomes.
Abstract
Ant-dispersed herbs (myrmecochores) can account for more than one-third of the stems in the temperate deciduous forests of eastern North America. Because many ant species have been observed collecting the seeds, this interaction is often described as a generalized mutualism. Here, we combine fieldwork and meta-analyses to test this assumption. Our meta-analysis demonstrated that Aphaenogaster ants (predominantly A. rudis) collect approximately 74±26% (mean± SD) of the myrmecochorous seeds in eastern North American forests where any encounters with Aphaenogaster were reported, and approximately 61 ±37% of the seeds in all the eastern forests where any seed collection has been monitored. This remarkable monopolization of seeds is due to at least two factors: 1) Aphaenogaster are significantly more likely to collect the ant-adapted seeds they discover than are ten other ant genera found in these forests and 2) the densities of Aphaenogaster and myrmecochorous plants are positively correlated at three nested spatial scales (within 20 x 20 m patches, among patches within a forest, and among 41 forests in the eastern United States). Although other ants can collect seeds, our analyses demonstrate that A. rudis is the primary seed dispersal vector for most of this rich temperate ant-dispersed flora. The low levels of plant partner diversity for myrmecochores demonstrated here rivals that of tropical ant-plants (myrmecophytes) and well exceeds that typically observed in temperate plant-frugivore and plant-pollinator mutualisms and myrmecochory in other biomes.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Upward ant distribution shift corresponds with minimum, not maximum, temperature tolerance

TL;DR: Results indicate that rising minimum temperatures allow A. rudis to move upward in elevation and displace A. picea, and these climate responses not only impact ant-ant interactions, but might have wide implications for ant-plant interactions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anthropogenic disturbance reduces seed-dispersal services for myrmecochorous plants in the Brazilian Caatinga.

TL;DR: Despite high overall diversity there is very limited functional redundancy in disperser ant species, resulting in low disperser resilience in relation to disturbance, likely to have important implications for recruitment by myrmecochorous plants, and therefore on vegetation composition and structure, at sites subject to high anthropogenic disturbance.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Biology and Natural History of Aphaenogaster rudis

TL;DR: The biology of these so-called rudis-group ant species, including details about their sociometry, productivity, natural history, and behavior, are synthesized here using published and newly collected data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Disruption of ant-seed dispersal mutualisms by the invasive Asian needle ant (Pachycondyla chinensis)

TL;DR: The hypothesis that the invasive ant Pachycondyla chinensis disrupts ant-seed dispersal mutualisms by displacing native ant species, especially the keystone mutualist Aphaenogaster rudis, while failing to disperse seeds itself is tested.
Journal ArticleDOI

A New (Old), Invasive Ant in the Hardwood Forests of Eastern North America and Its Potentially Widespread Impacts

TL;DR: The large geographic range of this ant species combined with its apparent impact on native species make it likely to have cascading consequences on eastern forests in years to come, effects mediated by the specifics of its life history which is very different from those of other invasive ants.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: It is shown that mutualistic networks are highly nested; that is, the more specialist species interact only with proper subsets of those species interacting with the more generalists, which generates highly asymmetrical interactions and organizes the community cohesively around a central core of interactions.
Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: It is shown mathematically that the correlation between interaction frequency and total effect (T) becomes more strongly positive the greater the variation of I relative to the variations of per-interaction effect (P) and the greaterThe correlation between I and P, the more frequent animal mutualists usually contribute the most to plant reproduction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Specialization, constraints, and conflicting interests in mutualistic networks.

TL;DR: It is concluded that quantitative specialization in ecological communities mirrors evolutionary trade-offs and constraints of web architecture and can be easily expanded to other types of biological interactions.
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