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Bracken, ants and extrafloral nectaries. III. How insect herbivores avoid ant predation

 

作者: P. A. HEADS,   J. H. LAWTON,  

 

期刊: Ecological Entomology  (WILEY Available online 1985)
卷期: Volume 10, issue 1  

页码: 29-42

 

ISSN:0307-6946

 

年代: 1985

 

DOI:10.1111/j.1365-2311.1985.tb00532.x

 

出版商: Blackwell Publishing Ltd

 

关键词: Bracken;extrafloral nectaries;ants;enemy‐free space;Lepidoptera;sawflies;galls;mines;distasteful haemolymph;predator‐avoidance behaviour.

 

数据来源: WILEY

 

摘要:

Abstract.1. Ants (Myrmica spp. and Formica lemani) visiting the extrafloral nectaries of bracken, Pteridium aquilinum, imposed heavy mortality on caterpillars of a novel moth species experimentally introduced onto bracken fronds. However, the exclusion of ants from bracken fronds had no significant effect on adapted bracken‐feeding herbivores in Britain.2. The feeding stages of British bracken‐feeding insects are immune to, or can largely avoid, predation by ants in a variety of ways. Gall formers and miners cannot be attacked by these ants. Two other species hide, one inside tied leaves, the other in a mass of ‘spittle’. Another group of species jumps away from, or falls off the plant when touched by ants. Sawfly caterpillars in the genera Strongylogaster, Aneugmenus and Tenthredo have viscous, distasteful haemolymph that repels ants.3. No species of bracken herbivore has an absolute temporal refuge from ants; during their development they all overlap with ants to some degree.4. Ant predation appears to have played a significant role in determining the contemporary structure of British bracken‐feeding insect communities. Distasteful haemolymph in sawfly caterpillars may have evolved in response to selection from ant predation. Other species may fortuitously possess characteristics, evolved in response to a variety of selective forces, that also reduce the impact of ants; without such characteristics, however, we postulate that they would be unable to live on this plant. An absence of external, foliage feeding Lepidoptera early in the spring, a high proportion of sawfly species, and a high proportion of gall‐formers and miners may all be characteristics of the bracken herbivore community which have been influenced by an

 

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