Abstract

Plants in more than 100 families secrete extrafloral nectar (EFN) to establish food-for-protection mutualisms with ants. Facultative ant-plants secrete EFN as a jasmonic acid (JA)-dependent response to attract generalist ants. In contrast, obligate ant-plants like the Central American “Swollen-Thorn Acacias” are colonized by specialized ants, although an individual host can carry ant colonies from different species that differ in the degree of protection they provide. We hypothesized that hosts that associate simultaneously with various partners should produce rewards in a modular manner to preferentially reward high quality partners. To test this hypothesis, we applied JA to distinct leaves and quantified cell wall invertase activity (CWIN; a regulator of nectar secretion) and EFN secretion by these “local” (i.e., treated) and the “systemic” (i.e., non-treated) leaves of the same branch. Both CWIN activity and EFN secretion increased in local and systemic leaves of the facultative ant-plant Acacia cochliacantha, but only in the local leaves of the obligate ant-plant, A. cornigera. The systemic EFN secretion in A. cochliacantha was associated with an enhanced emission of volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Such VOCs function as “external signals” that control systemic defense responses in diverse plant species. Indeed, the headspace of JA-treated branches of A. cochliacantha induced EFN secretion in both plant species, whereas the headspace of A. cornigera caused no detectable induction effect. Analyses of the headspace using GC-MS identified six VOCs in the headspace of A. cochliacantha that were not emitted by A. cornigera. Among these VOCs, β-caryophyllene and (cis)-hexenyl isovalerate have already been reported in other plant species to induce defense traits, including EFN secretion. Our observations underline the importance of VOCs as systemic within-plant signals and show that the modular rewarding in A. cornigera is likely to result from a reduced emission of the systemic signal, rather than from a reduced responsiveness to the signal. We suggest that modular rewarding allows hosts to restrict the metabolic investment to specific partners and to efficiently sanction potential exploiters.

Highlights

  • Most mutualisms are formed by hosts that interact with multiple partners

  • In the case of A. cochliacantha, only jasmonic acid (JA) treatment had a significant effect on extrafloral nectar (EFN) secretion (p < 0.001; see Figure 4B), whereas no significant difference could be detected between ant-free branches and branches to which ants had access (p > 0.05, see Figure 4B)

  • All leaves on the treated branches of A. cochliacantha responded with a significant increase in EFN secretion to JA application to the nectaries on leaves 1, 5, and 10, independently whether they were “local” or “systemic” leaves

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Summary

Introduction

Partners can differ in their quality as mutualists, and non-reciprocating partners infer a cost to their host without providing the corresponding benefit (Sachs, 2015). Host sanctions have been reported for mutualisms such as the legume–rhizobia mutualism, in which plants were reported to “penalize” non Nfixing nodules (Kiers et al, 2003; Westhoek et al, 2017), or for the fig–fig wasp mutualism, in which the fig tree aborted figs that were colonized by non-pollinating wasps (Jandér et al, 2012). A modular provisioning of rewards is adaptive in symbiotic systems in which different parts of the same host are colonized simultaneously by different partners. Hosts that engage in facultative mutualisms with nonsymbiotic partners should provide rewards in a more systemic way, in order to enhance their attractiveness to mutualists that eventually visit the host (Agrawal and Rutter, 1998)

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