The role of tending ants in host plant selection and egg parasitism of two facultative myrmecophilous butterflies

被引:0
作者
Alexandra Bächtold
Estevão Alves-Silva
Lucas A. Kaminski
Kleber Del-Claro
机构
[1] Universidade de São Paulo,Instituto de Biologia
[2] Universidade Federal de Uberlândia,Instituto de Biologia
[3] Universidade Estadual de Campinas,undefined
来源
Naturwissenschaften | 2014年 / 101卷
关键词
Cerrado; Lycaenidae;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Ovipositing adult females of myrmecophilous lycaenids are expected to select plants based on ant presence in order to maximize the survivorship of immature stages. Usually, larvae feed ants with honey-like solutions and, in turn, ants ward off parasitoids. Nonetheless, a rarely investigated approach is whether ant partners can also extend their protective behavior towards lycaenids eggs. Here, we investigated the ant-related oviposition pattern of Allosmaitia strophius and Rekoa marius; then, we compared egg parasitism according to the presence of ants. Lycaenid oviposition and egg parasitism (in percent) were experimentally compared in ant-present and ant-excluded treatments. The study plant, Heteropterys byrsonimifolia, is an extrafloral nectaried shrub which supports several ant species. We sampled 280 eggs, of which 39.65 % belonged to A. strophius and 60.35 % to R. marius. Both lycaenids eggs were significantly more abundant on branches with ants, especially those with Camponotus crassus and Camponotus blandus, two ant species known to attend to lycaenids. A. strophius and R. marius parasitism was 4.5- and 2.4-fold higher, respectively, in ant-present treatments, but the results were not statistically significant. Our study shows that ant-mediated host plant selection in lycaenids might be much more widespread than previously thought, and not restricted to obligate myrmecophilous species. Tending ants may be inefficient bodyguards of lycaenid eggs, because unlike larvae which release sugared liquids, eggs do not offer obvious rewards to ants. Ants can ward off parasitoids of larvae, as observed elsewhere, but our findings show that positive ant–lycaenid interactions are conditional and depend on immature ontogeny.
引用
收藏
页码:913 / 919
页数:6
相关论文
共 115 条
  • [21] Beattie AJ(2011) (Insecta: Thysanoptera) co-existing with ants in the flowers of Proc Biol Sci 278 1539-1547
  • [22] Daniels H(2002) (Malpighiaceae) J Evol Biol 15 861-870
  • [23] Gottsberger G(2001)Mutualism between Oecologia 126 53-57
  • [24] Fiedler K(2003) butterflies and ants, and the role of ant ecology in the evolution of larval-ant associations J Lepid Soc 1 1-16
  • [25] Del-Claro K(2014)Notes on the last instar larva and pupa of PLoS One 9 1-8
  • [26] Del-Claro K(2010) (Stoll) (Lepidoptera, Lycaenidae, Polyommatinae) Stud Neotrop Fauna E 45 11-19
  • [27] Berto V(2011)Effectiveness of caterpillar defenses against three species of invertebrate predators Physiol Entomol 36 208-214
  • [28] Réu W(2010)Systematic, evolutionary, and ecological implications of myrmecophily within the Lycaenidae (Insecta: Lepidoptera: Papilionoidea) Am Nat 176 322-334
  • [29] Del-Claro K(2008)Ants that associate with Lycaeninae butterfly larvae: diversity, ecology and biogeography Anim Cogn 11 525-33
  • [30] Marullo R(1970)Ant-associates of Palaearctic lycaenid butterfly larvae (Hymenoptera: Formicidae; Lepidoptera: Lycaenidae)—a review J Lepid Soc 24 190-202