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Ecological interactions among insect herbivores,ants and the host plant Baccharis dracunculifolia in a Brazilian mountain ecosystem
Authors:Graziella Fran  a Monteiro,Luiz Eduardo Macedo‐Reis,Wesley D  ttilo,Geraldo Wilson Fernandes,Flavio Siqueira de Castro,Frederico S. Neves
Affiliation:Graziella França Monteiro,Luiz Eduardo Macedo‐Reis,Wesley Dáttilo,Geraldo Wilson Fernandes,Flavio Siqueira de Castro,Frederico S. Neves
Abstract:Insect–plant interactions occur in several ways and have considerable environmental and ecological importance. Many feeding strategies have evolved among herbivorous insects, with host–herbivore systems likely being influenced by trophobionts with ants. We investigated how these interactions vary across elevation gradients by evaluating the structure of the herbivorous insect community and ants associated with Baccharis dracunculifolia at three distinct elevations (800, 1100, and 1400 m a.s.l.) on a mountain in southeastern Brazil. Moreover, we evaluated the diversity and specialisation of interactions between herbivores and host plants along the elevational gradient. We sampled herbivores and ants on 60 plants at each elevation (totalling 180 plant individuals). Herbivore species composition differed among elevations, as did interaction diversity and specialisation. Richness and abundance of chewing insects increased with elevation, while β‐diversity among patches of the host plant was higher at the lowest elevation, probably due to the patchy occurrence of B. dracunculifolia. Richness and abundance of sap‐sucking insects were higher at the intermediate elevation, possibly due to local environmental conditions. We observed a positive relationship between ant and herbivore trophobiont richness on B. dracunculifolia. We found that interactions were more specialised and less diverse at higher elevations compared to the lowest elevation. Changes in vegetation and environmental variables shaped species distributions and their ecological interactions along the elevation gradient. Our study demonstrates that increased elevation changes the structure and patterns of interactions of the herbivore insect guilds associated with the host plant B. dracunculifolia. Ant effects depend on the context, the environment, and the species of ants involved, and are essential for the presence of insect trophobionts.
Keywords:beta diversity  chewing insects  interaction diversity  elevation  sap‐sucking insects  Serra do Cipó  
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