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Myrmecophyte

Myrmecophytes (/mərˈmɛkəft/; literally "ant-plant") are plants that live in a mutualistic association with a colony of ants. There are over 100 different genera of myrmecophytes.[1] These plants possess structural adaptations that provide ants with food and/or shelter. These specialized structures include domatia, food bodies, and extrafloral nectaries.[1] In exchange for food and shelter, ants aid the myrmecophyte in pollination, seed dispersal, gathering of essential nutrients, and/or defense.[1] Specifically, domatia adapted to ants may be called myrmecodomatia.[2]

Acacia ants

Mutualism edit

 
Ants nesting in Macaranga bancana stem

Myrmecophytes share a mutualistic relationship with ants, benefiting both the plants and ants. This association may be either facultative or obligate.[3]

Obligate edit

In obligate mutualisms, both of the organisms involved are interdependent; they cannot survive on their own. An example of this type of mutualism can be found in the plant genus Macaranga. All species of this genus provide food for ants in various forms, but only the obligate species produce domatia.[1] Some of the most common species of myrmecophytic Macaranga interact with ants in the genus Crematogaster. C. borneensis have been found to be completely dependent on its partner plant, not being able to survive without the provided nesting spaces and food bodies. In laboratory tests, the worker ants did not survive away from the plants, and in their natural habitat they were never found anywhere else.[4]

Facultative edit

Facultative mutualism is a type of relationship where the survival of both parties (plant and ants, in this instance) is not dependent upon the interaction. Both organisms can survive without the other species. Facultative mutualisms most often occur in plants that have extrafloral nectaries but no other specialized structures for the ants.[3] These non-exclusive nectaries allow a variety of animal species to interact with the plant.[3] Facultative relationships can also develop between non-native plant and ant species, where co-evolution has not occurred. For example, Old World legumes that were introduced to North America can be protected by ants that originated from a different region.[3]

Structural adaptations edit

 
Tuber on Myrmecodia tuberosa

Domatia edit

Domatia are internal plant structures that appear to be specifically adapted for habitation by ants.[5] These cavities are found primarily in the stems, leaves, and spines of plants. Many different genera of plants offer domatia. Plants of the genus Acacia have some of the most widely recognized forms of domatia and offer some of the best examples of ant-plant obligate mutualism.[5] Different Acacia species provide a variety of resources needed for their codependent counterparts. One of these resources is the need for shelter. Acacia have enlarged thorns on their stems that are excavated by ants for use as housing structures.[5] Since the tree contains their nest, these aggressive ants react strongly to any disturbance of the tree, providing the myrmecophyte with defense from grazing herbivores and encroaching vines.[5]

Domatia can also be found within the tubers of certain plants.[6] Tubers form when the hypocotyls of a seedling swells to form a hollow, chambered structure that can become inhabited by ants.[6] The plant family Rubiaceae contains the most commonly known tuberous myrmecophyte, Myrmecodia.[6]

 
Enlarged thorns and beltian bodies on Acacia

Food bodies edit

Some plants produce food bodies for use by other organisms. These small epidermal structures contain a variety of nutrients that are removed and consumed by foragers.[7] Food bodies are identified by the main nutrient they contain and by the genus of plant producing them.[7] Beltian bodies are found on the leaflet tips of Acacia plants and have relatively high protein content.[8] Beccarian bodies are found on young leaves of the genus Macaranga and are especially rich in lipids. Lipids are also the main nutrient found in pearl bodies, found on the leaves and stems of Ochroma plants. Most ant inhabitants of Cecropia plants harvest the last type of food body, as their primary food source. Remarkably these Müllerian bodies, found on the stalk of the leaf, are primarily glycogen. Glycogen is the principal storage carbohydrate found in animals and is extremely rare in plants.[7]

Nutrient content of various food bodies
Food Bodies
Main Nutrient Contained
Plant Genus
Location on Plants
Beltian bodies Protein   Acacia  Leaflet tips  
Beccarian bodies Lipids   Macaranga  Young leaves  
Pearl bodies Lipids   Ochroma  Leaves and stems  
Müllerian bodies Glycogen   Cecropia  Petiole of the leaf  
 
Extrafloral nectaries on the petiole of a Prunus avium leaf

Extrafloral nectaries edit

Extrafloral nectaries are sugar-producing glands found outside the flower structures of plants. They occur in many different plant species around the world and are most commonly associated with vegetative structures that normally do not have nectaries, such as leaves, stems, and twigs.[3] These secreting structures are often non-exclusive in that nectar can be taken by a variety of animals; however, in some obligate myrmecophyte plants such as Acacia collinsii, extrafloral nectar is modified to be attractive only to the ant partners in the symbiosis.[3][9][10] The nectar thus provided feeds ants, which in turn protect these myrmecophytes from herbivorous activity. A species of deciduous tree that displays extrafloral nectaries, Catalpa speciosa, shows a decreased loss of leaf tissue on branches protected by ants, and an increase in number of seeds produced.[3]

Ant-plant interactions edit

Ants as pollinators edit

Unlike their bee relatives, ants rarely pollinate plants. Various suggestions have been made as to why ants are poor pollinators, although none have been verified: a) ants do not fly, limiting their transport of pollen far enough to effect cross-pollination, b) ants do not systematically forage as bees do, and c) ants are not hairy, and clean themselves too frequently to allow pollen to be carried to other plants.[11] In most cases of ant pollination, the ants are one of multiple pollinators, meaning that the plants are not completely dependent on ants for pollination. However, the orchid Leporella fimbriata can only be pollinated by its winged male ant partner (Myrmecia urens).[12]

 
Afzelia africana seeds bearing orange elaiosomes

Ants and seed dispersal edit

Myrmecochory, "ant-dispersal," is the collection and dispersal of seeds by ants. Ants disperse more than 30% of the spring-flowering herbaceous plants in eastern North America.[7] Both the plant and the ant benefit in this scenario. The ants are provided with an elaiosome, a detachable food body found on the surface of the seed. Elaiosomes have diverse compositions, usually high in lipids and fatty acids, but also containing amino acids, sugars, and protein.[7] The ants remove the elaiosome once the seed has been transported to the colony. As a result, the seeds are safely placed in nutrient-rich substrate protected from predators, benefiting the plant with optimum establishment conditions for its seed.[7]

Ants feeding plants edit

Myrmecotrophy, meaning "ant-fed," is the ability of plants to absorb nutrients from debris piles left by ant nests or, in the case of Nepenthes bicalcarata, from ant egesta.[13] The tropical tree Cecropia peltata obtains 98% of its nitrogen from the waste deposited by its ant counterparts.[14]

A recent study by Chanam et al.[15] showed that plants bearing domatia can be favoured even before the establishment of a specialised protection-based symbiosis, as nutritional benefits can be provided by a motley set of domatia residents that could include multiple species of ant (including protective, non-protective and even plant-damaging species such as Crematogaster dohrni) as well as other invertebrates, including as arboreal earthworms. Only some individuals of the myrmecophyte Humboldtia brunonis (found in the Western Ghats of India) bear domatia on some of their branches, while all individuals produce extrafloral nectar. Each domatium is formed by modified swollen and hollow internodes. These domatia have a self-opening slit that allows access to the domatium interior and are prone to interloping residents (including many species of non-protective ants and the arboreal earthworm Perionyx pullus) in addition to the protective ants.

 
Ants collaborating to dismember an intruding ant

Earlier studies established that domatia-bearing H. brunonis plants have greater fruit set, hence greater reproductive success, than H. brunonis plants without domatia. Plant tissues near domatia received 17% and 9% of their nitrogen from the ants (protective and non-protective) and the earthworm respectively. The absorbed nutrients also travelled to distant branches; hence, fruit set was not different between branches with and without domatia. This study demonstrated that non-protective interlopers in the domatia still contribute to the greater wellbeing of the plant by contributing to plant nutrition.

Ants as defense edit

Since plants provide essential resources for ants, the need to protect the plant and those resources is extremely important. Many myrmecophytes are defended from both herbivores and other competing plants by their ant symbionts.[7] Acacia cornigera, for example, is thoroughly guarded by its obligate ant partner, Pseudomyrmex ferruginea. A single colony of P. ferruginea may contain more than 30,000 ants, and can tend multiple Acacia trees.[7] The soldier ants are extremely aggressive, patrolling the trees twenty-four hours a day. Any disturbance to the tree alerts ants, who then recruit more workers from inside the horn domatia. These ants defend the Acacia by biting, violently stinging, and pruning any trespassers. The ants keep the plant free from other insects and vertebrate herbivores, from invading fungi and also from other plants.[7]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d Speight, Hunter & Watt 2008
  2. ^ Wilson 1971
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Koptur 1991
  4. ^ Fiala, Maschwitz & Pong 1991
  5. ^ a b c d Janzen 1966
  6. ^ a b c Jebb 1991
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i Rico-Gray & Oliveira 2007
  8. ^ Heil et al. 2004.
  9. ^ Heil, Rattke & Boland 2005.
  10. ^ Gonzalez-Teuber & Heil 2009.
  11. ^ Beattie & Hughes 2002
  12. ^ Peakall, Handel & Beattie 1991
  13. ^ Bazile, V.; Moran, J.A.; Moguédec, G. Le; Marshall, D.J.; Gaume, L. (2012). "A carnivorous plant fed by its ant symbiont: a unique multi-faceted nutritional mutualism". PLOS ONE. 7 (5): e36179. Bibcode:2012PLoSO...736179B. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0036179. PMC 3348942. PMID 22590524.
  14. ^ Benzing 1991
  15. ^ Chanam, J., Sheshshayee, M.S., Kasinathan, S., Jagdeesh, A., Joshi, K.A., Borges, R.M., "Nutritional benefits from domatia inhabitants in an ant–plant interaction: interlopers do pay the rent" (Functional Ecology, 2014), doi:10.1111/1365-2435.12251

References edit

  • Beattie, Andrew J.; Hughes, Lesley (2002). "Ant-plant interactions". In Herrera, Carlos M.; Pellmyr, Olle (eds.). Plant-Animal Interactions. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing. pp. 211–235.
  • Benzing, David H. (1991). "Myrmecotrophy: origins, operation, and importance". In Huxley, Camilla R.; Cutler, David F. (eds.). Ant-Plant Interactions. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 353–373. ISBN 0-19-854639-4.
  • Fiala, Brigitte; Maschwitz, Ulrich; Pong, Tho Yow (1991). "The association between Macaranga trees and ants in South-east Asia". In Huxley, Camilla R.; Cutler, David F. (eds.). Ant-Plant Interactions. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 263–270. ISBN 0-19-854639-4.
  • Gonzalez-Teuber, M.; Heil, M. (2009). "The Role of Extrafloral Nectar Amino Acids for the Preferences of Facultative and Obligate Ant Mutualists". Journal of Chemical Ecology. 35 (4): 459–468. doi:10.1007/s10886-009-9618-4. PMID 19370376. S2CID 30114793.
  • Heil, M.; Baumann, B.; Kruger, R.; Linsenmair, K.E. (2004). "Main nutrient compounds in food bodies of Mexican Acacia ant-plants". Chemoecology. 14: 45–52. doi:10.1007/s00049-003-0257-x. S2CID 24186903.
  • Heil, M.; Rattke, J.; Boland, W. (2005). "Postsecretory hydrolysis of nectar sucrose and specialization in ant/plant mutualism". Science. 308 (5721): 560–563. Bibcode:2005Sci...308..560H. doi:10.1126/science.1107536. PMID 15845855. S2CID 18065410.
  • Janzen, D. H. (1966). "Coevolution of mutualism between ants and acacias in Central America". Evolution. 20 (3): 249–275. doi:10.2307/2406628. JSTOR 2406628. PMID 28562970.
  • Jebb, Matthew (1991). "Cavity structure and function in the tuberous Rubiaceae". In Huxley, Camilla R.; Cutler, David F. (eds.). Ant-Plant Interactions. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 374–389. ISBN 0-19-854639-4.
  • Koptur, Suzanne (1991). "Extrafloral nectarines of herbs and trees: modeling the interaction with ants and parasitoids". In Huxley, Camilla R.; Cutler, David F. (eds.). Ant-Plant Interactions. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 213–230. ISBN 0-19-854639-4.
  • Peakall, Rod; Handel, Steven N.; Beattie, Andrew J. (1991). "The evidence for and importance of ant pollination". In Huxley, Camilla R.; Cutler, David F. (eds.). Ant-Plant Interactions. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 421–429. ISBN 0-19-854639-4.
  • Rico-Gray, Victor; Oliveira, Paulo S (2007). The Ecology and Evolution of Ant-Plant Interactions. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. pp. 42–51, 101–109.
  • Speight, Martin R.; Hunter, Mark D.; Watt, Allan D. (2008). Ecology of Insects (2nd ed.). West Sussex, UK: Wiley Blackwell Publications. pp. 212–216.
  • Wilson, Edward O. (1971). The Insect Societies. Belknap Press. ISBN 978-0-674-45490-3.

External links edit

  • A video about ant plants

myrmecophyte, literally, plant, plants, that, live, mutualistic, association, with, colony, ants, there, over, different, genera, myrmecophytes, these, plants, possess, structural, adaptations, that, provide, ants, with, food, shelter, these, specialized, stru. Myrmecophytes m er ˈ m ɛ k e f aɪ t literally ant plant are plants that live in a mutualistic association with a colony of ants There are over 100 different genera of myrmecophytes 1 These plants possess structural adaptations that provide ants with food and or shelter These specialized structures include domatia food bodies and extrafloral nectaries 1 In exchange for food and shelter ants aid the myrmecophyte in pollination seed dispersal gathering of essential nutrients and or defense 1 Specifically domatia adapted to ants may be called myrmecodomatia 2 Acacia ants Contents 1 Mutualism 1 1 Obligate 1 2 Facultative 2 Structural adaptations 2 1 Domatia 2 2 Food bodies 2 3 Extrafloral nectaries 3 Ant plant interactions 3 1 Ants as pollinators 3 2 Ants and seed dispersal 3 3 Ants feeding plants 3 4 Ants as defense 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksMutualism edit nbsp Ants nesting in Macaranga bancana stemMyrmecophytes share a mutualistic relationship with ants benefiting both the plants and ants This association may be either facultative or obligate 3 Obligate edit In obligate mutualisms both of the organisms involved are interdependent they cannot survive on their own An example of this type of mutualism can be found in the plant genus Macaranga All species of this genus provide food for ants in various forms but only the obligate species produce domatia 1 Some of the most common species of myrmecophytic Macaranga interact with ants in the genus Crematogaster C borneensis have been found to be completely dependent on its partner plant not being able to survive without the provided nesting spaces and food bodies In laboratory tests the worker ants did not survive away from the plants and in their natural habitat they were never found anywhere else 4 Facultative edit Facultative mutualism is a type of relationship where the survival of both parties plant and ants in this instance is not dependent upon the interaction Both organisms can survive without the other species Facultative mutualisms most often occur in plants that have extrafloral nectaries but no other specialized structures for the ants 3 These non exclusive nectaries allow a variety of animal species to interact with the plant 3 Facultative relationships can also develop between non native plant and ant species where co evolution has not occurred For example Old World legumes that were introduced to North America can be protected by ants that originated from a different region 3 Structural adaptations edit nbsp Tuber on Myrmecodia tuberosaDomatia edit Domatia are internal plant structures that appear to be specifically adapted for habitation by ants 5 These cavities are found primarily in the stems leaves and spines of plants Many different genera of plants offer domatia Plants of the genus Acacia have some of the most widely recognized forms of domatia and offer some of the best examples of ant plant obligate mutualism 5 Different Acacia species provide a variety of resources needed for their codependent counterparts One of these resources is the need for shelter Acacia have enlarged thorns on their stems that are excavated by ants for use as housing structures 5 Since the tree contains their nest these aggressive ants react strongly to any disturbance of the tree providing the myrmecophyte with defense from grazing herbivores and encroaching vines 5 Domatia can also be found within the tubers of certain plants 6 Tubers form when the hypocotyls of a seedling swells to form a hollow chambered structure that can become inhabited by ants 6 The plant family Rubiaceae contains the most commonly known tuberous myrmecophyte Myrmecodia 6 nbsp Enlarged thorns and beltian bodies on AcaciaFood bodies edit Some plants produce food bodies for use by other organisms These small epidermal structures contain a variety of nutrients that are removed and consumed by foragers 7 Food bodies are identified by the main nutrient they contain and by the genus of plant producing them 7 Beltian bodies are found on the leaflet tips of Acacia plants and have relatively high protein content 8 Beccarian bodies are found on young leaves of the genus Macaranga and are especially rich in lipids Lipids are also the main nutrient found in pearl bodies found on the leaves and stems of Ochroma plants Most ant inhabitants of Cecropia plants harvest the last type of food body as their primary food source Remarkably these Mullerian bodies found on the stalk of the leaf are primarily glycogen Glycogen is the principal storage carbohydrate found in animals and is extremely rare in plants 7 Nutrient content of various food bodies Food Bodies Main Nutrient Contained Plant Genus Location on PlantsBeltian bodies Protein Acacia Leaflet tips Beccarian bodies Lipids Macaranga Young leaves Pearl bodies Lipids Ochroma Leaves and stems Mullerian bodies Glycogen Cecropia Petiole of the leaf nbsp Extrafloral nectaries on the petiole of a Prunus avium leafExtrafloral nectaries edit Extrafloral nectaries are sugar producing glands found outside the flower structures of plants They occur in many different plant species around the world and are most commonly associated with vegetative structures that normally do not have nectaries such as leaves stems and twigs 3 These secreting structures are often non exclusive in that nectar can be taken by a variety of animals however in some obligate myrmecophyte plants such as Acacia collinsii extrafloral nectar is modified to be attractive only to the ant partners in the symbiosis 3 9 10 The nectar thus provided feeds ants which in turn protect these myrmecophytes from herbivorous activity A species of deciduous tree that displays extrafloral nectaries Catalpa speciosa shows a decreased loss of leaf tissue on branches protected by ants and an increase in number of seeds produced 3 Ant plant interactions editAnts as pollinators edit Unlike their bee relatives ants rarely pollinate plants Various suggestions have been made as to why ants are poor pollinators although none have been verified a ants do not fly limiting their transport of pollen far enough to effect cross pollination b ants do not systematically forage as bees do and c ants are not hairy and clean themselves too frequently to allow pollen to be carried to other plants 11 In most cases of ant pollination the ants are one of multiple pollinators meaning that the plants are not completely dependent on ants for pollination However the orchid Leporella fimbriata can only be pollinated by its winged male ant partner Myrmecia urens 12 nbsp Afzelia africana seeds bearing orange elaiosomesAnts and seed dispersal edit Main article myrmecochory Myrmecochory ant dispersal is the collection and dispersal of seeds by ants Ants disperse more than 30 of the spring flowering herbaceous plants in eastern North America 7 Both the plant and the ant benefit in this scenario The ants are provided with an elaiosome a detachable food body found on the surface of the seed Elaiosomes have diverse compositions usually high in lipids and fatty acids but also containing amino acids sugars and protein 7 The ants remove the elaiosome once the seed has been transported to the colony As a result the seeds are safely placed in nutrient rich substrate protected from predators benefiting the plant with optimum establishment conditions for its seed 7 Ants feeding plants edit Myrmecotrophy meaning ant fed is the ability of plants to absorb nutrients from debris piles left by ant nests or in the case of Nepenthes bicalcarata from ant egesta 13 The tropical tree Cecropia peltata obtains 98 of its nitrogen from the waste deposited by its ant counterparts 14 A recent study by Chanam et al 15 showed that plants bearing domatia can be favoured even before the establishment of a specialised protection based symbiosis as nutritional benefits can be provided by a motley set of domatia residents that could include multiple species of ant including protective non protective and even plant damaging species such as Crematogaster dohrni as well as other invertebrates including as arboreal earthworms Only some individuals of the myrmecophyte Humboldtia brunonis found in the Western Ghats of India bear domatia on some of their branches while all individuals produce extrafloral nectar Each domatium is formed by modified swollen and hollow internodes These domatia have a self opening slit that allows access to the domatium interior and are prone to interloping residents including many species of non protective ants and the arboreal earthworm Perionyx pullus in addition to the protective ants nbsp Ants collaborating to dismember an intruding antEarlier studies established that domatia bearing H brunonis plants have greater fruit set hence greater reproductive success than H brunonis plants without domatia Plant tissues near domatia received 17 and 9 of their nitrogen from the ants protective and non protective and the earthworm respectively The absorbed nutrients also travelled to distant branches hence fruit set was not different between branches with and without domatia This study demonstrated that non protective interlopers in the domatia still contribute to the greater wellbeing of the plant by contributing to plant nutrition Ants as defense edit Since plants provide essential resources for ants the need to protect the plant and those resources is extremely important Many myrmecophytes are defended from both herbivores and other competing plants by their ant symbionts 7 Acacia cornigera for example is thoroughly guarded by its obligate ant partner Pseudomyrmex ferruginea A single colony of P ferruginea may contain more than 30 000 ants and can tend multiple Acacia trees 7 The soldier ants are extremely aggressive patrolling the trees twenty four hours a day Any disturbance to the tree alerts ants who then recruit more workers from inside the horn domatia These ants defend the Acacia by biting violently stinging and pruning any trespassers The ants keep the plant free from other insects and vertebrate herbivores from invading fungi and also from other plants 7 See also editAnt garden List of symbiotic relationshipsNotes edit a b c d Speight Hunter amp Watt 2008 Wilson 1971 a b c d e f g Koptur 1991 Fiala Maschwitz amp Pong 1991 a b c d Janzen 1966 a b c Jebb 1991 a b c d e f g h i Rico Gray amp Oliveira 2007 Heil et al 2004 Heil Rattke amp Boland 2005 Gonzalez Teuber amp Heil 2009 Beattie amp Hughes 2002 Peakall Handel amp Beattie 1991 Bazile V Moran J A Moguedec G Le Marshall D J Gaume L 2012 A carnivorous plant fed by its ant symbiont a unique multi faceted nutritional mutualism PLOS ONE 7 5 e36179 Bibcode 2012PLoSO 736179B doi 10 1371 journal pone 0036179 PMC 3348942 PMID 22590524 Benzing 1991 Chanam J Sheshshayee M S Kasinathan S Jagdeesh A Joshi K A Borges R M Nutritional benefits from domatia inhabitants in an ant plant interaction interlopers do pay the rent Functional Ecology 2014 doi 10 1111 1365 2435 12251References editBeattie Andrew J Hughes Lesley 2002 Ant plant interactions In Herrera Carlos M Pellmyr Olle eds Plant Animal Interactions Malden MA Blackwell Publishing pp 211 235 Benzing David H 1991 Myrmecotrophy origins operation and importance In Huxley Camilla R Cutler David F eds Ant Plant Interactions New York NY Oxford University Press pp 353 373 ISBN 0 19 854639 4 Fiala Brigitte Maschwitz Ulrich Pong Tho Yow 1991 The association between Macaranga trees and ants in South east Asia In Huxley Camilla R Cutler David F eds Ant Plant Interactions New York NY Oxford University Press pp 263 270 ISBN 0 19 854639 4 Gonzalez Teuber M Heil M 2009 The Role of Extrafloral Nectar Amino Acids for the Preferences of Facultative and Obligate Ant Mutualists Journal of Chemical Ecology 35 4 459 468 doi 10 1007 s10886 009 9618 4 PMID 19370376 S2CID 30114793 Heil M Baumann B Kruger R Linsenmair K E 2004 Main nutrient compounds in food bodies of Mexican Acacia ant plants Chemoecology 14 45 52 doi 10 1007 s00049 003 0257 x S2CID 24186903 Heil M Rattke J Boland W 2005 Postsecretory hydrolysis of nectar sucrose and specialization in ant plant mutualism Science 308 5721 560 563 Bibcode 2005Sci 308 560H doi 10 1126 science 1107536 PMID 15845855 S2CID 18065410 Janzen D H 1966 Coevolution of mutualism between ants and acacias in Central America Evolution 20 3 249 275 doi 10 2307 2406628 JSTOR 2406628 PMID 28562970 Jebb Matthew 1991 Cavity structure and function in the tuberous Rubiaceae In Huxley Camilla R Cutler David F eds Ant Plant Interactions New York NY Oxford University Press pp 374 389 ISBN 0 19 854639 4 Koptur Suzanne 1991 Extrafloral nectarines of herbs and trees modeling the interaction with ants and parasitoids In Huxley Camilla R Cutler David F eds Ant Plant Interactions New York NY Oxford University Press pp 213 230 ISBN 0 19 854639 4 Peakall Rod Handel Steven N Beattie Andrew J 1991 The evidence for and importance of ant pollination In Huxley Camilla R Cutler David F eds Ant Plant Interactions New York NY Oxford University Press pp 421 429 ISBN 0 19 854639 4 Rico Gray Victor Oliveira Paulo S 2007 The Ecology and Evolution of Ant Plant Interactions Chicago IL University of Chicago Press pp 42 51 101 109 Speight Martin R Hunter Mark D Watt Allan D 2008 Ecology of Insects 2nd ed West Sussex UK Wiley Blackwell Publications pp 212 216 Wilson Edward O 1971 The Insect Societies Belknap Press ISBN 978 0 674 45490 3 External links editA video about ant plants Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Myrmecophyte amp oldid 1174119321, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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