Abstract

Abstract. 1. The strength or density dependence of pairwise species interactions can depend on the presence or absence of other species, especially potential mutualists.2. The gall waspDisholcaspis eldoradensisinduces plant galls that secrete a sweet honeydew from their top surfaces while the wasp larvae are active. These galls are actively tended by Argentine ants, which collect the honeydew and drive off parasitoids attempting to attack the gall wasp.3. When ants were excluded, the total rate of parasitism by seven species of parasitoids increased by 36%, and the rate of gall‐wasp emergence decreased by 54%.4. The total percentage parasitism was affected by gall density when ants were excluded but not when ants were unmanipulated, suggesting a change in parasitoid functional responses due to ant tending.5. In addition, excluding ants significantly altered the proportions of different parasitoid species that emerged from galls; one parasitoid species increased from 1% to 34%, and another decreased from 46% to 19%.6. The invasive Argentine ants studied are capable of maintaining the mutualism with the gall wasps that evolved in the presence of different ant species and also act as a selective filter for the local community of generalist parasitoids trying to attack this gall species.

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