Volume 42, Issue 5 p. 668-674
Original Article

Effects of plant quality and ant defence on herbivory rates in a neotropical ant-plant

GISELE M. MENDES

GISELE M. MENDES

Programa de Pós-Graduação em Ecologia, Conservação e Manejo de Vida Silvestre, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte-MG, Brazil

Search for more papers by this author
TATIANA G. CORNELISSEN

Corresponding Author

TATIANA G. CORNELISSEN

Departamento de Ciências Naturais, Laboratório de Ecologia de Insetos, Universidade Federal de São João del-Rei, São João del-Rei-MG, Brazil

Correspondence: Tatiana Cornelissen, Laboratory of Insect Ecology, Department of Natural Sciences – Campus Dom Bosco, Universidade Federal de São João del-Rei, 36301-160 São João del-Rei-MG, Brazil. E-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
First published: 22 June 2017
Citations: 1
Associate Editor: Andre Kessler

Abstract

1. Understanding the degree to which populations and communities are limited by both bottom-up and top-down effects is still a major challenge for ecologists, and manipulation of plant quality, for example, can alter herbivory rates in plants. In addition, biotic defence by ants can directly influence the populations of herbivores, as demonstrated by increased rates of herbivory or increased herbivore density after ant exclusion. The aim of this study was to evaluate bottom-up and top-down effects on herbivory rates in a mutualistic ant-plant.

2. In this study, the role of Azteca alfari ants as biotic defence in individuals of Cecropia pachystachya was investigated experimentally with a simultaneous manipulation of both bottom-up (fertilisation) and top-down (ant exclusion) factors. Four treatments were used in a fully factorial design, with 15 replicates for each treatment: (i) control plants, without manipulation; (ii) fertilised plants, ants not manipulated; (iii) unfertilised plants and excluded ants and (iv) fertilised plants and ants excluded.

3. Fertilisation increased the availability of foliar nitrogen in C. pachystachya, and herbivory rates by chewing insects were significantly higher in fertilised plants with ants excluded.

4. Herbivory, however, was more influenced by bottom-up effects – such as the quality of the host plant – than by top-down effects caused by ants as biotic defences, reinforcing the crucial role of leaf nutritional quality for herbivory levels experienced by plants. Conditionality in ant defence under increased nutritional quality of leaves through fertilisation might explain increased levels of herbivory in plants with higher leaf nitrogen.