Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/18415
Title: Recognition of host plant volatiles by pheidole minutula mayr (myrmicinae), an amazonian ant-plant specialist
Authors: Dáttilo, Wesley F.C.
Izzo, Thiago Junqueira
Inouye, Brian D.
Vasconcelos, Heraldo L.
Bruna, Emilio M.
Keywords: Bioassay
Chemical Cue
Compartmentalization
Host Plant
Host Specificity
Hypothesis Testing
Mutualism
Plant Insect Interaction
Recognition
Specialist
Sympatry
Volatile Element
Formicidae
Maieta
Maieta Guianensis
Melastomataceae
Myrmicinae
Pheidole Minutula
Tococa
Tococa Bullifera
Issue Date: 2009
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Biotropica
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 41, Número 5, Pags. 642-646
Abstract: In the tropics, several ant species are obligate inhabitants of leaf pouches and other specialized structures in plants known as myrmecophytes. However, the cues used by ant queens to locate suitable host-plants following dispersal remain poorly understood. Here we tested the hypothesis that Pheidole minutula queens use volatiles to distinguish their host Maieta guianensis (Melastomataceae) from other sympatric myrmecophytes. To do so, we used a Y-tube olfactometer to quantify the preference for volatiles of different plant species. Our results indicate that P. minutula queens discriminate the chemical volatiles produced by its host-plant from those of other sympatric ant-plant species. However, queens failed to distinguish the volatiles of Maieta from those of the ant-plant Tococa bullifera (Melastomataceae), with which P. minutula is not mutualistically associated. Nevertheless, a strong preference for Maieta over Tococa was observed during a subsequent bioassay, where the ants had physical contact with a domatium of each plant species. These results suggest that additional, short distance mechanisms are also necessary for host discrimination. Overall, our findings suggest that the high degree of compartmentalization observed in symbiotic ant-plant relationships is achieved, at least in part, by the relatively high degree of specificity in host selection displayed by foundress queens. Abstract in Portugese is available at. © 2009 by The Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1111/j.1744-7429.2009.00518.x
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