Abstract

The system consisting of the plant Passiflora caerulea, the ants that visit its extrafloral nectaries and the larvae of the Gulf fritillary butterfly (Agraulis vanillae) that feed on the plant provides an opportunity to explore the effect of one ecological interaction on another. The objective of this work was to study the effect of the mutualism between the ants and the plant on the antagonism between the butterfly larvae and the plant. The general hypothesis tested was that ants protect the plant from the attack of the larvae exchange for the nectar they receive. An ant exclusion experiment was conducted to explore whether their presence affects the presence of eggs and larvae and the damage they produce. This experiment was carried out at Parque Natural Municipal Ribera Norte (PNMRN), located in the San Isidro party, in the province of Buenos Aires, between September 2011 and March 2012. Five different ant morphotypes were recorded on P. caerulea. According to what was expected, there was a negative effect of the ants on the number of eggs and larvae of A. vanillae. However, the presence of ants did not affect the level of herbivory damage observed. In other words, the protection mutualism had a negative effect on the herbivore attacked (in this case, the butterfly), but did not seem to have the expected positive effect on the defended plant (the Passiflora). This reflects the complexity of tripartite interactions in plant-herbivore-ant systems and the multiple factors that may influence how the species involved are affected. From the point of view of the conservation of biodiversity and its functions in a threatened environment, it is remarkable to have registered the occurrence of these interactions in a small urban nature reserve such as PNMRN.https://doi.org/10.25260/EA.18.28.1.0.635

Highlights

  • Las hormigas constituyen uno de los grupos de animales más abundantes y diversos del planeta

  • El tipo de recompensa alimentaria más común es néctar producido en nectarios extraflorales (NEF) que, en general, se encuentran en hojas, tallos o en las proximidades de las estructuras reproductivas de las plantas (Beattie and Hughes 2002), y cuya presencia fue descripta en más de 300 géneros de plantas (Koptur 1991)

  • Esto posibilitó estudios experimentales de cómo las hormigas afectan los distintos estadios del ciclo de vida de los lepidópteros

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Summary

Introduction

Las hormigas constituyen uno de los grupos de animales más abundantes y diversos del planeta. En plantas donde se restringió el acceso de hormigas se registró un número de huevos (predicción 1) significativamente mayor que en las plantas con hormigas (media por hoja±SE, con: 0.24±0.02, sin: 0.34±0.02; coeficiente de regresión=1.20±0.34, t=3.51, P=0.0038) (Figura 1b; ver detalles modelo M2 del Anexo).

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