Dear neighbor: Trees with extrafloral nectaries facilitate defense and growth of adjacent undefended trees

Author:

Staab Michael12ORCID,Pietsch Stefanie23,Yan Haoru45,Blüthgen Nico1,Cheng Anpeng45,Li Yi4ORCID,Zhang Naili6,Ma Keping45ORCID,Liu Xiaojuan47ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ecological Networks Technical University Darmstadt Darmstadt Germany

2. Nature Conservation and Landscape Ecology University of Freiburg Freiburg im Breisgau Germany

3. Field Station Fabrikschleichach University of Würzburg Würzburg Germany

4. State Key Laboratory of Vegetation and Environmental Change Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

5. College of Life Sciences University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

6. College of Forestry Beijing Forestry University Beijing China

7. Zhejiang Qianjiangyuan Forest Biodiversity National Observation and Research Station Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractPlant diversity can increase productivity. One mechanism behind this biodiversity effect is facilitation, which is when one species increases the performance of another species. Plants with extrafloral nectaries (EFNs) establish defense mutualisms with ants. However, whether EFN plants facilitate defense of neighboring non‐EFN plants is unknown. Synthesizing data on ants, herbivores, leaf damage, and defense traits from a forest biodiversity experiment, we show that trees growing adjacent to EFN trees had higher ant biomass and species richness and lower caterpillar biomass than conspecific controls without EFN‐bearing neighbors. Concurrently, the composition of defense traits in non‐EFN trees changed. Thus, when non‐EFN trees benefit from lower herbivore loads as a result of ants spilling over from EFN tree neighbors, this may allow relatively reduced resource allocation to defense in the former, potentially explaining the higher growth of those trees. Via this mutualist‐mediated facilitation, promoting EFN trees in tropical reforestation could foster carbon capture and multiple other ecosystem functions.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Youth Innovation Promotion Association of the Chinese Academy of Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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