Abstract

It has been known for centuries that floral and extra-floral nectar secreted by plants attracts and rewards animals. Extra-floral nectar is involved in so-called indirect defense by attracting animals (generally ants) that prey on herbivores, or by discouraging herbivores from feeding on the plant. Floral nectar is presented inside the flower close to the reproductive organs and rewards animals that perform pollination while visiting the flower. In both cases nectar is a source of carbon and nitrogen compounds that feed animals, the most abundant solutes being sugars and amino acids. Plant–animal relationships involving the two types of nectar have therefore been used for a long time as text-book examples of symmetric mutualism: services provided by animals to plants in exchange for food provided by plants to animals. Cheating (or deception or exploitation), namely obtaining the reward/service without returning any counterpart, is however, well-known in mutualistic relationships, since the interacting partners have conflicting interests and selection may favor cheating strategies. A more subtle way of exploiting mutualism was recently highlighted. It implies the evolution of strategies to maximize the benefits obtained by one partner while still providing the reward/service to the other partner. Several substances other than sugars and amino acids have been found in nectar and some affect the foraging behavior of insects and potentially increase the benefits to the plant. Such substances can be considered plant cues to exploit mutualism. Recent evidence motivated some authors to use the term “manipulation” of animals by plants in nectar-mediated mutualistic relationships. This review highlights the recent background of the “manipulation” hypothesis, discussing it in the framework of new ecological and evolutionary scenarios in plant–animal interactions, as a stimulus for future research.

Highlights

  • Mutualistic inter-species relationships, i.e., relationships in which interacting species reciprocate benefits received, are very common in all kingdoms of living organisms since virtually every species is involved in one or more such relationships

  • Indirect defense based on mutualism with ants, on which we focus in this review, has wide phylogenetic and geographic distribution, the highest level of complexity and coadaptation of plant–ant relationships is reached in angiosperms of tropical and subtropical regions (Hölldobler and Wilson, 1990; Heil and McKey, 2003; Rico-Gray and Oliveira, 2007; Ness et al, 2010)

  • Recent research on nectar-mediated plant–animal interactions highlights that floral nectar (FN) and extra-floral nectar (EFN) is much more than a sugary reward for animal services

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Summary

Frontiers in Plant Science

Floral nectar is presented inside the flower close to the reproductive organs and rewards animals that perform pollination while visiting the flower In both cases nectar is a source of carbon and nitrogen compounds that feed animals, the most abundant solutes being sugars and amino acids. Cheating (or deception or exploitation), namely obtaining the reward/service without returning any counterpart, is well-known in mutualistic relationships, since the interacting partners have conflicting interests and selection may favor cheating strategies. Several substances other than sugars and amino acids have been found in nectar and some affect the foraging behavior of insects and potentially increase the benefits to the plant. Such substances can be considered plant cues to exploit mutualism.

INTRODUCTION
NECTAR PRODUCTION IS COSTLY FOR PLANTS
INSECT FORAGING ACTIVITIES ARE AFFECTED BY PLANTS THROUGH NECTAR TRAITS
Plants Control Foraging Behavior of Pollinators by Nectar Chemistry
Caffeine and theophylline
Inhibition of gut invertase
Do Plants Control the Behavior of Ants by Means of EFN?
Findings
CONCLUDING REMARKS AND FUTURE CHALLENGES
Full Text
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