Tropical Forest Community Ecology

(Grace) #1
Tropical Arboreal Ants 343

species dominate EFNs on plants where they
tend trophobionts (authors’ observations), and
a phalanx of Do. quadridenticulatus workers
can wrest control of EFN plants from aggres-
siveCa. sericeiventrisworkers (Davidson personal
observation). Nevertheless, lacking wide-ranging
foraging, trophobiont-tenders may encounter
fewer potential prey (apart from tended tropho-
bionts) than do leaf-foraging formicines. Consis-
tent with this conjecture, larval formicines have
the anatomical structures to process solid food,
whereasdolichoderinelarvaedonot(Wheelerand
Wheeler 1976), though they may consume insect
haemolymph, particularly that of trophobionts
(Dillet al.2002).
Small-bodied taxa may be more likely than
their larger counterparts to accept low quality
resources, because absolute locomotory costs are
greater for large-bodied workers (although offset
somewhat by longer stride lengths; Fewellet al.
1996). Moreover, if they forage regularly over
shorter distances, this could also allow them to
be less selective (Davidson 1978). Consistent with
these hypotheses, SUCmin declines marginally,
and AAmin significantly, with log of ant body
size (P=0.06 andP=0.03, respectively). Addi-
tionally, small-bodied taxa tend to have popu-
lous colonies that potentially both increase the
colony’s capacity for intensive and extensive
search (e.g., Swain 1980 forCrematogaster) and
confer numerical advantage in battles of attri-
tion (McGlynn 1999, Palmer 2004). The afore-
mentioned attributes should contribute to both
exploitative and interference competitive ability,
making these taxa difficult to dislodge from con-
trolled resources. However, except where nesting
polydomously, and due to their limited foraging
ranges, smaller taxa may prevail more often at
localized resources than over widely distributed
ones, on a scale, for example, of whole trees.
Guild structure, or the structure of inter-
actions within communities, is a key determi-
nant of local species diversity (May 1972), and
once foraging functional groups are more finely
elucidated for arboreal taxa, it will be impor-
tant to determine whether interspecific inter-
actions are stronger within or between those
groups. It is obvious, however, that we currently
know little about the interaction structure within


communities of opportunistic arboreal rainforest
exudate-feeders, and about how that structure
maps to phylogenetic structure. Such questions
must be resolved if we are ever to fully understand
one of the earliest and most commonly noted pat-
terns in such communities, that is, associations
between particular territorial dominants and the
specific non-dominant ants capable of coexisting
within their territories (e.g., Leston 1978, Majer
1993, Dejean and Corbara 2003, Blüthgenet al.
2004b, but see Davidsonet al.2007).

Foraging functional groups and plant
defense

We return briefly to the matter of which
free-living ant taxa might be associated with
reduced damage to plants on which they for-
age. Table 20.1 summarizes attributes of the two
broad functional groups as they bear on that sub-
ject. By 7 of 10 criteria, leaf-foragers appear more
likely than trophobiont-tenders to exert a net pos-
itive effect on plants where they forage. Of these
seven, criteria not previously discussed include
alteration of plant metabolism and development,
frequenttransmissionof plantpathogensthrough
stylets of tended trophobionts (e.g., Buckley
1987), and plant resource losses to ants and tro-
phobionts.Althoughtwocriteriaapparentlyshow
greater benefits from trophobiont-tenders, they
could actually be associated with higher resource
lossesif theprincipaleffectof trophobiont-tenders
per unit time and worker number are negative,
as the first seven criteria suggest. By the final
criterion, effects of leaf-foragers and trophobiont-
tenders may be equivalent on average, with spa-
tially territorial, carnivorous, and small-bodied
taxa within each group exhibiting the greatest
N-deprivation (Davidson 2005). We do not mean
to suggest that trophobiont-tenders are always
less desirable associates of plants than are leaf-
foragers, but rather argue from first principles
why that should be so on average for free-
living ant taxa. Against natural enemies deterred
only by large numbers of foraging workers,
trophobiont-tenderscouldbethe“preferred”asso-
ciates, and plant protection has been demon-
strated for at least some trophobiont-tenders,
Free download pdf