• Title of article

    How to be an ant on figs

  • Author/Authors

    Bain، نويسنده , , Anthony F. Harrison، نويسنده , , Rhett D. and Schatz، نويسنده , , Bertrand، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
  • Pages
    12
  • From page
    97
  • To page
    108
  • Abstract
    Mutualistic interactions are open to exploitation by one or other of the partners and a diversity of other organisms, and hence are best understood as being embedded in a complex network of biotic interactions. Figs participate in an obligate mutualism in that figs are dependent on agaonid fig wasps for pollination and the wasps are dependent on fig ovules for brood sites. Ants are common insect predators and abundant in tropical forests. Ants have been recorded on approximately 11% of fig species, including all six subgenera, and often affect the fig–fig pollinator interaction through their predation of either pollinating and parasitic wasps. On monoecious figs, ants are often associated with hemipterans, whereas in dioecious figs ants predominantly prey on fig wasps. A few fig species are true myrmecophytes, with domatia or food rewards for ants, and in at least one species this is linked to predation of parasitic fig wasps. Ants also play a role in dispersal of fig seeds and may be particularly important for hemi-epiphytic species, which require high quality establishment microsites in the canopy. The intersection between the fig–fig pollinator and ant–plant systems promises to provide fertile ground for understanding mutualistic interactions within the context of complex interaction networks.
  • Keywords
    Agaonidae , Ficus , ants , Fig wasp , mutualism , Tropical forest , Pollination , Ant–plant interactions
  • Journal title
    Acta Oecologica
  • Serial Year
    2014
  • Journal title
    Acta Oecologica
  • Record number

    1740978