Ants may buffer the Janzen–Connell effect in a tropical forest in Southwest China.

Autor: Zhou, Gang1,2 (AUTHOR), Liu, Jing‐Xin3 (AUTHOR), Liu, Jikun4 (AUTHOR), Yang, Jie3,5 (AUTHOR), Qiao, Xiujuan1,6 (AUTHOR) xjqiao@wbgcas.cn, Cao, Min3,5 (AUTHOR), Jiang, Mingxi1,6 (AUTHOR)
Předmět:
Zdroj: Ecology. Sep2024, Vol. 105 Issue 9, p1-7. 7p.
Abstrakt: Mutualistic symbioses between ants and plants are widespread in nature. Ants can deter unwanted pests and provide protection for plants in return for food or housing rewards. Using a long‐term demographic dataset in a tropical seasonal rain forest in Southwest China, we found that associations with ants positively influenced seedling survival and adult growth, and also, species with extrafloral nectaries experienced weaker conspecific negative density dependence compared with species without extrafloral nectaries. Furthermore, we found strong evidence suggesting that species in our forest experienced conspecific density dependence, which we interpreted as heavy pest pressure that may drive the development of anti‐pest symbioses such as the plant–ant relationship. Our findings suggest that ants and conspecific neighbors play important but inverse roles on plant survival and growth and that ants can buffer tree neighborhood interactions in this tropical forest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: GreenFILE