Influence of biotic, chemical and mechanical plant defenses on the foraging pattern of the leaf-cutter ant (Acromyrmex striatus) in a subtropical forest
Abstract
The diet of the leaf-cutter ant Acromyrmex striatus was used as indirect evidence for potential antiherbivore activity by the nectivorous ant Camponotus blandus and by chemical and mechanical plant defenses. Data on ant activity, plant abundance, and foliar material for analyses of chemical and mechanical plant defenses were collected during spring in a subtropical forest in the Argentinean Chaco. We found a negative relationship between the proportion of visits by C. blandus and leaf harvesting of A. striatus for the plant species that offer nectar. However, the most abundant plant species in the forest comprised the greatest part of the leaf-cutter diet. In general, no relationship was found between chemical or mechanical defenses and leaf-cutter diet for all the plant species of the forest. A few plant species with high levels of plant defenses suffered little or no harvesting by leaf-cutter ants. Our findings suggest two main reasons for the absence or low representation of nectar-offering plant species in the diet of A. striatus: nectivorous ant activity and low plant species abundances.
References
Bentley, B.M. 1977. The protective function of ants visiting the extrafloral nectaries of Bixa orellana (Bixaceae). J. Ecol. 58:27- 36.
Bowers, M.A. and S. D. Porter. 1981. Effect of foraging distance on water content of substrate harvested by Alta colonibica. Ecology 62:273-275.
Bmhcr, E.H. 1982. Chaco and Caatinga-South American arid savannas, woodlands and thickets. In Huntley B. J. and B. H. Walker (Eds.) Ecology of Tropical Savannas. Springer-Verlag. New York. Pp. 243-265.
Cherret, J.M. 1968. The foraging behaviour of Alta cephalotcs (Hymenoptera, Formicidae). Foraging patterns and plants species attacked in a tropical rain forest. J. Animal Ecol. 37:387-403.
Coley, P.D. 1983. Herbivory and defensive characteristics of tree species in a lowland tropical forest. Ecol. Monog. 53:209-233.
Culvenor, C.C. and J.S. Fitzgerald. 1963. A field method for alkaloid screening of plants. J. Pharm. Sc. 52:303-304.
Farji Brener, A.G. P. Folgarait and J. Protomastro. 1992. Asociación entre el arbusto Cappatis retasa (Capparidaceac) y las hormigas Camponotus blandus y Acromyrmex striatus (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Rev. Biol. Trop. 40:341:344.
Feeny, P. P. 1970. Seasonal changes on oak leaf tannins and nutrients as a cause of spring feeding by winter moth caterpillars. Ecology 51:593-603.
Gibbs, R.D. 1974. Chemotaxonomy of Flowering Plants. McGill Quen’s University Press. Montreal. Pp. 920.
Hickman, J.C. 1974. Pollination by ants: a low-energy system. Science 184:1290-1292.
Howard, J.J. 1987. Leafcutting ant diet selection: The role of nutrients, water and secondary chemistry. Ecology 68:503-515.
Howard, J.J. 1988. Leafcutting ant diet selection: relative influence of leaf chemistry and physical features. Ecology 69:250-260.
Hubbell, S.P. and D.F. Wiemer. 1983. Host plant selection by an attine ant. In P. Jaisson (Ed). Social Insects in the Tropics. University of Paris Press. Paris. Pp. 133-154.
Inouye, D.W. and O.R. Taylor. 1979. A temperate region ant-plant seed predator system: consequences of extrafloral nectar secretion by Hellianthella quinquenenr vis. Ecology 60:1-7.
Janzen, D.H. 1966. Coevolution of mutualism between ants and Acacias in Central America. Evolution 20:249-275.
Justum, A.R., J.M. Cherrett and M. Fisher. 1981. Interactions between the fauna of citrus trees in Trinidad and the ants Atta cephalotes and Azteca sp. Journal of Applied Ecology. 18:187-195.
Keeler, K.M. 1981. Function of Mentzelia nuda (Loasaceae) in postfloral nectaries in seed defenses. Amer. J. Bot. 68:295-299.
Koptur, S. 1984. Experimental evidence of defense of Inga (Mimosoideae) saplings by ants. Ecology 65:1787-1793.
Pickett, T.M. and W. Clarck. 1979. The function of extrafloral nectaries: Opuntia acanthocarpa (Cactacea). Amer. J. Bot. 66.618-62.5.
Protomastro, J.J. 1988. Fenología y mecanismos de interacción en el bosque de quebracho colorado, blanco y mistol. Tesis Doctoral. Depto de Biología. FCEyN, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Rher, S.S., P.P. Feeny and D.H. Janzen. 1973. Chemical defenses in Central America non-ant acacias. J. Animal Ecol. 42:405-416.
Rockwood, L.L. 1976. Plant selection and foraging patterns in two species of leaf-cutting ants Atta. Ecology 57:48-61.
Rockwood, L.L. 1977. Foraging patterns and plant selection in Costa Rica leaf-cutting ants. J. N. York Ent. Soc. 85:222-233.
Rosenthal, G.A. and D.H. Janzen. 1979. Herbivores: their interaction with secondary plant metabolites. Academic Press. New York. Pp. 718.
Seigler, C.S. and J.E. Ebingler. 1987. Cyanogenic glycosides in ant acacias of Mexico and Central America. Southwestern Nat. 32:499-503.
Stephenson, A.G. 1982. The role of extrafloral nectaries of Catalpa speciosa in limiting herbivory and increasing fruit production. Ecology 63:663-669.
Stewart, J.L. and K.M. Keeler. 1988. Are there trade-offs among antiherbivore defenses in Ipomoea (Convolvulaceae)? Oikos 53:79-86.
Stradling, D.J. 1978. The influence of size on foraging in the ant Atta cephalores and the effect of some plant defense mechanisms. J. Animal Ecol. 47:173-188.
Swain, T. and W.E. Hillis. 1982. The phenolics constituents of Prunus domestica. J. Sc. Food Agric. 10:63-68.
Tilman, D. 1978. Cheeries, ants and tent caterpillars: timing of nectar production in relation to susceptibility of caterpillars to ant predation. Ecology 59:686-692.
Weber, N.A. 1969. Ecological relation of three Atta species in Panama. Ecology 50:141-147.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Authors retain their rights as follows: 1) by granting the journal the right to its first publication, and 2) by registering the published article with a Creative Commons Attribution License (CC-BY 4.0), which allows authors and third parties to view and use it as long as they clearly mention its origin (citation or reference, including authorship and first publication in this journal). Authors can make other non-exclusive distribution agreements as long as they clearly indicate their origin and are encouraged to widely share and disseminate the published version of their work.