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Floral volatiles controlling ant behaviour
Authors:Pat G Willmer  Clive V Nuttman  Nigel E Raine  Graham N Stone  Jonathan G Pattrick  Kate Henson  Philip Stillman  Lynn McIlroy  Simon G Potts  Jeffe T Knudsen
Institution:School of Biology, University of St Andrews, Fife KY16 9TS, Scotland, UK;;Research Centre for Psychology, School of Biological &Chemical Sciences, Queen Mary University of London, Mile End Road, London, E1 4NS, UK;;Institute of Evolutionary Biology, School of Biology, University of Edinburgh, Kings Buildings, Edinburgh EH9 3JT, Scotland, UK;;Centre for Agri-Environmental Research, University of Reading, Reading, RG6 6AR, UK;;and Department of Ecology, Lund University, Solvegatan 37, SE-223 62 Lund, Sweden
Abstract:1 . Ants show complex interactions with plants, both facultative and mutualistic, ranging from grazers through seed predators and dispersers to herders of some herbivores and guards against others. But ants are rarely pollinators, and their visits to flowers may be detrimental to plant fitness.
2 . Plants therefore have various strategies to control ant distributions, and restrict them to foliage rather than flowers. These 'filters' may involve physical barriers on or around flowers, or 'decoys and bribes' sited on the foliage (usually extrafloral nectaries - EFNs). Alternatively, volatile organic compounds (VOCs) are used as signals to control ant behaviour, attracting ants to leaves and/or deterring them from functional flowers. Some of the past evidence that flowers repel ants by VOCs has been equivocal and we describe the shortcomings of some experimental approaches, which involve behavioural tests in artificial conditions.
3 . We review our previous study of myrmecophytic acacias, which used in situ experiments to show that volatiles derived from pollen can specifically and transiently deter ants during dehiscence, the effects being stronger in ant-guarded species and more effective on resident ants, both in African and Neotropical species. In these plants, repellence involves at least some volatiles that are known components of ant alarm pheromones, but are not repellent to beneficial bee visitors.
4 . We also present new evidence of ant repellence by VOCs in temperate flowers, which is usually pollen-based and active on common European ants. We use these data to indicate that across a wide range of plants there is an apparent trade-off in ant-controlling filter strategies between the use of defensive floral volatiles and the alternatives of decoying EFNs or physical barriers.
Keywords:ant guards              E  E-α-farnesene  evolutionary filters  extrafloral nectar  floral repellence  morphological floral barriers  pollen volatiles
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