You get what you pay for: reward-specific trade-offs among direct and ant-mediated defences in plants.

Biology Letters
Julia Koricheva, Gustavo Q Romero

Abstract

Plant defences against herbivores include direct defences such as secondary metabolites or physical structures (e.g. trichomes) as well as indirect defences mediated via mutualistic interactions with other organisms including ants. Production of both direct defences and rewards for mutualistic ants may be costly for a plant, and it has been suggested that trade-offs may exist between direct and ant-mediated defences. We have conducted a meta-analysis of 25 studies testing the above hypothesis and found a significant negative correlation between plant allocation to direct and ant-mediated defences. The strength of correlation was similar for across- and within-species comparisons, and for chemical and physical direct defences. However, trade-offs with direct defences were significant only in plants which offered to ants more costly rewards such as food bodies and/or domatia, but not in plants which attracted ants with relatively cheap extrafloral nectaries. Our results therefore support the hypothesis that plant investment in ant-mediated defences may reduce the requirement for direct chemical and physical defences, but only in plants which offer more costly rewards to their bodyguards.

Citations

Jul 11, 2014·Proceedings. Biological Sciences·Nina E FatourosTibor Bukovinszky
Aug 13, 2015·Scientific Reports·Shuang ZhangKeming Ma
May 8, 2021·Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society·Rose E O'DeaShinichi Nakagawa

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