Influence of macronutrient imbalance on native ant foraging and interspecific interactions in the field
Abstract
1. Ants interact with a diversity of organisms. These interactions, coupled with their abundance, cause ants to have ecologically important effects across multiple trophic levels. 2. Empirical study of ant nutritional ecology has led to the prediction that a macronutrient imbalance will affect ant behaviour and interspecific interactions that underlie these broad‐scale effects. Excess carbohydrate relative to protein is predicted to increase ant aggressiveness, predatory tendency and foraging activity, and to decrease collection of hemipteran honeydew and plant nectar. 3. In field experiments conducted in 2009 and 2010, captive colony fragments of a native ant, Formica podzolica (Hymenoptera: Formicidae), were provided with either simulated prey or carbohydrate solution ad libitum . Foraging behaviours and interactions with flowers, myrmecophilous aphids and aphid natural enemies on wild‐grown plants were documented. 4. Strong effects of macronutrient imbalance on foraging manifested quickly and consistently across colonies; in accordance with predictions, prey‐fed foragers collected both honeydew and floral nectar, whereas carbohydrate‐fed ants ceased collecting these resources. Counter to predictions, carbohydrate‐fed ants dramatically lowered their activity levels and did not prey upon aphids. 5. Ants had no effect on aphid enemies in 2009, when the latter were relatively rare, but decreased their abundance in 2010. Despite this protection, the net effect of ants on aphids was negative (measured only in 2009). Prey‐fed ants demonstrated a strong preference for honeydew over floral nectar, thus demonstrating that a macronutrient imbalance may lead to different interactions with similar resources. 6. This study links ant nutrition and community ecology by demonstrating the rapid, asymmetric and multitrophic consequences of nutritionally mediated behaviour.
Local Knowledge Graph (18 entities)
Related Works
Items connected by shared entities, co-authorship, citations, or semantic similarity.
Competition for mutualists: aphids and ants
A balanced diet: Effects of ant (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) nutritional state on the balance between mutualism and predation upon aphids (Hemiptera: Aphididae)
Progressive sensitivity of trophic levels to warming underlies an elevational gradient in ant–aphid mutualism strength
Data from: Progressive sensitivity of trophic levels to warming underlies an elevational gradient in ant-aphid mutualism strength
Supplementary material from "Nutrient niche dynamics among wild pollinators"
Data from: Elevational cline in herbivore abundance driven by a monotonic increase in trophic level sensitivity to aridity
Colorado Ranch Management School (Part 7)
Determination of Beaver Food Consumption
Cattle a Vital Link in the Global Food Chain
Cited By (20 times, 9 in Knowledge Hub)
The Evolution and Ecology of Interactions Between Ants and Honeydew-Producing Hemipteran Insects
Early snowmelt reduces aphid abundance <i>Aphis asclepiadis</i> by creating water stressed host plants <i>Ligusticum porteri</i> and altering interactions with ants
Progressive sensitivity of trophic levels to warming underlies an elevational gradient in ant–aphid mutualism strength
Elevational cline in herbivore abundance driven by a monotonic increase in trophic level sensitivity to aridity
The effects of climate change and biodiversity loss on mutualisms
Effects of early snowmelt and climate warming on Valeriana edulis and the insects that depend on it.
Mechanisms underlying plant sexual dimorphism in multi-trophic arthropod communities
Abiotic and multitrophic determinants of geographic distribution in an herbivorous insect
Plant sex and induced responses independently influence herbivore performance, natural enemies and aphid-tending ants
References (58)
2 in Knowledge Hub, 56 external
