TY - JOUR
T1 - Contrasting effects of an invasive ant on a native and an invasive plant
AU - Lach, Lori
AU - Tillberg, Chadwick V.
AU - Suarez, Andrew V.
N1 - Mauritius Sugar Research Institute for identifying hemipterans and beetles, and the National Parks and Conservation Service for allowing us to conduct this study on Ile aux Aigrettes. K. Abbott, D. Holway, and K. Parr provided comments on previous versions of the manuscript. This research is based upon work supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation under grant numbers 0401703 and 0516452.
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - When invasive species establish in new environments, they may disrupt existing or create new interactions with resident species. Understanding of the functioning of invaded ecosystems will benefit from careful investigation of resulting species-level interactions. We manipulated ant visitation to compare how invasive ant mutualisms affect two common plants, one native and one invasive, on a sub-tropical Indian Ocean island. Technomyrmex albipes, an introduced species, was the most common and abundant ant visitor to the plants. T. albipes were attracted to extrafloral nectaries on the invasive tree (Leucaena leucocephala) and deterred the plant's primary herbivore, the Leucaena psyllid (Heteropsylla cubana). Ant exclusion from L. leucocephala resulted in decreased plant growth and seed production by 22% and 35%, respectively. In contrast, on the native shrub (Scaevola taccada), T. albipes frequently tended sap-sucking hemipterans, and ant exclusion resulted in 30% and 23% increases in growth and fruit production, respectively. Stable isotope analysis confirmed the more predacious and herbivorous diets of T. albipes on the invasive and native plants, respectively. Thus the ants' interactions protect the invasive plant from its main herbivore while also exacerbating the effects of herbivores on the native plant. Ultimately, the negative effects on the native plant and positive effects on the invasive plant may work in concert to facilitate invasion by the invasive plant. Our findings underscore the importance of investigating facilitative interactions in a community context and the multiple and diverse interactions shaping novel ecosystems.
AB - When invasive species establish in new environments, they may disrupt existing or create new interactions with resident species. Understanding of the functioning of invaded ecosystems will benefit from careful investigation of resulting species-level interactions. We manipulated ant visitation to compare how invasive ant mutualisms affect two common plants, one native and one invasive, on a sub-tropical Indian Ocean island. Technomyrmex albipes, an introduced species, was the most common and abundant ant visitor to the plants. T. albipes were attracted to extrafloral nectaries on the invasive tree (Leucaena leucocephala) and deterred the plant's primary herbivore, the Leucaena psyllid (Heteropsylla cubana). Ant exclusion from L. leucocephala resulted in decreased plant growth and seed production by 22% and 35%, respectively. In contrast, on the native shrub (Scaevola taccada), T. albipes frequently tended sap-sucking hemipterans, and ant exclusion resulted in 30% and 23% increases in growth and fruit production, respectively. Stable isotope analysis confirmed the more predacious and herbivorous diets of T. albipes on the invasive and native plants, respectively. Thus the ants' interactions protect the invasive plant from its main herbivore while also exacerbating the effects of herbivores on the native plant. Ultimately, the negative effects on the native plant and positive effects on the invasive plant may work in concert to facilitate invasion by the invasive plant. Our findings underscore the importance of investigating facilitative interactions in a community context and the multiple and diverse interactions shaping novel ecosystems.
KW - Ant mutualisms
KW - Enemy release
KW - Extrafloral nectaries
KW - Herbivory
KW - Honeydew
KW - Trophic position
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/77955841900
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/77955841900#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1007/s10530-010-9703-1
DO - 10.1007/s10530-010-9703-1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:77955841900
SN - 1387-3547
VL - 12
SP - 3123
EP - 3133
JO - Biological Invasions
JF - Biological Invasions
IS - 9
ER -