The importance of petiole structure on inhabitability by ants in Piper sect. Macrostachys (Piperaceae) |
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Authors: | ERIC. J. TEPE MICHAEL A. VINCENT LINDA E. WATSON |
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Affiliation: | Department of Botany, Miami University, Oxford, OH 45056, USA |
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Abstract: | Several Central American species of Piper sect. Macrostachys have obligate associations with ants, in which the ant partner derives food and shelter from modified plant structures and, in turn, protects the plant against fungal infection and herbivory. In addition to these obligate ant-plants (i.e. myrmecophytes), several other species in Piper have resident ants only sometimes (facultative), and still other plant species never have resident ants. Sheathing petioles of sect. Macrostachys form the domatia in which ants nest. Myrmecophytes in sect. Macrostachys have tightly closed petiole sheaths with bases that clasp the stem. These sheathing petioles appear to be the single most important plant character in the association between ants and species of sect. Macrostachys . We examined the structure and variation of petioles in these species, and our results indicate that minor modifications in a small number of petiolar characters make the difference between petioles that are suitable for habitation by ants and those that are not. © 2007 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society , 2007, 153 , 181–191. |
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Keywords: | ant–plant mutualisms domatia myrmecophytes pearl bodies |
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