期刊论文详细信息
PeerJ
Ants contribute to pollination but not to reproduction in a rare calcareous grassland forb
article
Michael Rostás1  Felix Bollmann2  David Saville3  Michael Riedel2 
[1] Bio-Protection Research Centre, Lincoln University, Lincoln;Julius-von-Sachs-Institute for Biosciences, Department of Botany II, University of Würzburg;Saville Statistical Consulting Ltd, Lincoln
关键词: Ants;    Breeding system;    Geitonogamy;    Germination;    Inbreeding depression;    Metapleural gland;    Siberian spurge;    Foraging behaviour;    Pollen;   
DOI  :  10.7717/peerj.4369
学科分类:社会科学、人文和艺术(综合)
来源: Inra
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【 摘 要 】

The number of plants pollinated by ants is surprisingly low given the abundance of ants and the fact that they are common visitors of angiosperms. Generally ants are considered as nectar robbers that do not provide pollination service. We studied the pollination system of the endangered dry grassland forb Euphorbia seguieriana and found two ant species to be the most frequent visitors of its flowers. Workers of Formica cunicularia carried five times more pollen than smaller Tapinoma erraticum individuals, but significantly more viable pollen was recovered from the latter. Overall, the viability of pollen on ant cuticles was significantly lower (p < 0.001)—presumably an antibiotic effect of the metapleural gland secretion. A marking experiment suggested that ants were unlikely to facilitate outcrossing as workers repeatedly returned to the same individual plant. In open pollinated plants and when access was given exclusively to flying insects, fruit set was nearly 100%. In plants visited by ants only, roughly one third of flowers set fruit, and almost none set fruit when all insects were excluded. The germination rate of seeds from flowers pollinated by flying insects was 31 ± 7% in contrast to 1 ± 1% resulting from ant pollination. We conclude that inbreeding depression may be responsible for the very low germination rate in ant pollinated flowers and that ants, although the most frequent visitors, play a negligible or even deleterious role in the reproduction of E. seguieriana. Our study reiterates the need to investigate plant fitness effects beyond seed set in order to confirm ant-plant mutualisms.

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