Direct and indirect negative interactions between ant guards and pollinators on ant-plants are expected for two reasons. First, aggressive ants may deter pollinators directly. Second, pollinators benefit from plant investment in reproduction whilst ants benefit from plant investment in indirect defense, and resource allocation trade-offs between these functions could lead to indirect conflict. We explored the potential for ant-pollinator conflict in a Mexican myrmecophile, Turnera velutina, which rewards ants with extrafloral nectar and pollinators with floral nectar. We characterized the daily timing of ant and pollinator activity on the plant and used experiments to test for direct and indirect conflict between these two groups of mutuali...
Variation in partner species and frequency of interaction between species pairs are potential driver...
As flower visitors, ants rarely benefit a plant, commonly disrupting pollination by deterring other ...
Ants regularly visit flowers, but they may decrease plant reproductive success by competing with pol...
Ant-plants recruit ants to defend them against herbivores, but most of them also require pollinator...
The mutualism of ants and extrafloral nectary (EFN)-bearing plants is known to reduce rates of herbi...
As flower visitors, ants rarely benefit a plant. They are poor pollinators, and can also disrupt pol...
Ant-acacias are a classic example of insect-plant mutualism, the ants defending the plant from attac...
While some studies have shown that ants that visit extrafloral nectaries may defend their host plant...
1. Ant guards protect plants from herbivores, but can also hinder pollination by damaging reproducti...
Thousands of plant species throughout tropical and temperate zones secrete extrafloral nectar (EFN) ...
Abstract only availableStudies of floral ecology traditionally encapsulate interactions between flow...
Besides the eff ectiveness of floral visitors, to better understand pollination systems is necessary...
Many species interact with multiple mutualists, yet most studies investigate mutualisms as pairwise ...
Many plants attract insect pollinators with floral nectar (FN) and ant “bodyguards” with extrafloral...
Quantifying costs and benefits of ostensibly mutualistic interactions is an important step toward un...
Variation in partner species and frequency of interaction between species pairs are potential driver...
As flower visitors, ants rarely benefit a plant, commonly disrupting pollination by deterring other ...
Ants regularly visit flowers, but they may decrease plant reproductive success by competing with pol...
Ant-plants recruit ants to defend them against herbivores, but most of them also require pollinator...
The mutualism of ants and extrafloral nectary (EFN)-bearing plants is known to reduce rates of herbi...
As flower visitors, ants rarely benefit a plant. They are poor pollinators, and can also disrupt pol...
Ant-acacias are a classic example of insect-plant mutualism, the ants defending the plant from attac...
While some studies have shown that ants that visit extrafloral nectaries may defend their host plant...
1. Ant guards protect plants from herbivores, but can also hinder pollination by damaging reproducti...
Thousands of plant species throughout tropical and temperate zones secrete extrafloral nectar (EFN) ...
Abstract only availableStudies of floral ecology traditionally encapsulate interactions between flow...
Besides the eff ectiveness of floral visitors, to better understand pollination systems is necessary...
Many species interact with multiple mutualists, yet most studies investigate mutualisms as pairwise ...
Many plants attract insect pollinators with floral nectar (FN) and ant “bodyguards” with extrafloral...
Quantifying costs and benefits of ostensibly mutualistic interactions is an important step toward un...
Variation in partner species and frequency of interaction between species pairs are potential driver...
As flower visitors, ants rarely benefit a plant, commonly disrupting pollination by deterring other ...
Ants regularly visit flowers, but they may decrease plant reproductive success by competing with pol...