Plant-ants use symbiotic fungi as a food source: new insight into the nutritional ecology of ant–plant interactions

Author:

Blatrix Rumsaïs1,Djiéto-Lordon Champlain2,Mondolot Laurence3,La Fisca Philippe3,Voglmayr Hermann4,McKey Doyle15

Affiliation:

1. Centre d'Ecologie Fonctionnelle et Evolutive (UMR 5175), CNRS, 1919 Route de Mende, 34293 Montpellier Cedex 5, France

2. Laboratory of Zoology, Faculty of Science, University of Yaoundé I, PO Box 812 Yaoundé, Cameroon

3. Laboratoire de Botanique, Phytochimie et Mycologie, UMR 5175 CEFE-CNRS, Faculté de Pharmacie, Université Montpellier 1, 15 Avenue Charles Flahault, BP 14491, 34 093 Montpellier Cedex 5, France

4. Department of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany, Faculty Centre of Biodiversity, University of Vienna, Rennweg 14, 1030 Vienna, Austria

5. Institut Universitaire de France

Abstract

Usually studied as pairwise interactions, mutualisms often involve networks of interacting species. Numerous tropical arboreal ants are specialist inhabitants of myrmecophytes (plants bearing domatia, i.e. hollow structures specialized to host ants) and are thought to rely almost exclusively on resources derived from the host plant. Recent studies, following up on century-old reports, have shown that fungi of the ascomycete order Chaetothyriales live in symbiosis with plant-ants within domatia. We tested the hypothesis that ants use domatia-inhabiting fungi as food in three ant–plant symbioses: Petalomyrmex phylax / Leonardoxa africana , Tetraponera aethiops / Barteria fistulosa and Pseudomyrmex penetrator / Tachigali sp. Labelling domatia fungal patches in the field with either a fluorescent dye or 15 N showed that larvae ingested domatia fungi. Furthermore, when the natural fungal patch was replaced with a piece of a 15 N-labelled pure culture of either of two Chaetothyriales strains isolated from T. aethiops colonies, these fungi were also consumed. These two fungi often co-occur in the same ant colony. Interestingly, T. aethiops workers and larvae ingested preferentially one of the two strains. Our results add a new piece in the puzzle of the nutritional ecology of plant-ants.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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