1. Ants show complex interactions with plants, both facultative and mutualistic, ranging from grazers through seed predators and dispersers to herders of some herbivores and guards against others. But ants are rarely pollinators, and their visits to flowers may be detrimental to plant fitness. 2. Plants therefore have various strategies to control ant distributions, and restrict them to foliage rather than flowers. These ‘filters’ may involve physical barriers on or around flowers, or ‘decoys and bribes’ sited on the foliage (usually extrafloral nectaries - EFNs). Alternatively, volatile organic compounds (VOCs) are used as signals to control ant behaviour, attracting ants to leaves and / or deterring them from functional flowers. Some of t...
1Many flowers produce ant-repellent substances that prevent ants from discouraging pollinator visits...
Ants regularly visit flowers, but they may decrease plant reproductive success by competing with pol...
While some studies have shown that ants that visit extrafloral nectaries may defend their host plant...
1. Ants show complex interactions with plants, both facultative and mutualistic, ranging from grazer...
As flower visitors, ants rarely benefit a plant, commonly disrupting pollination by deterring other ...
As flower visitors, ants rarely benefit a plant. They are poor pollinators, and can also disrupt pol...
The phenomenon of ant-guarding on Acacia trees is probably the best known case of a mutualism betwee...
As flower visitors, ants rarely benefit a plant. They are poor pollinators, and can also disrupt pol...
As flower visitors, ants rarely benefit a plant. They are poor pollinators, and can also disrupt pol...
Chemical signals emitted by plants are crucial to understanding the ecology and evolution of plant-a...
Ant-acacias represent a classic insect-plant mutualism: the ants defend the plant from attack by her...
Abstract only availableWorld economy, including agriculture and food production, is heavily dependan...
1Many flowers produce ant-repellent substances that prevent ants from discouraging pollinator visits...
Ants regularly visit flowers, but they may decrease plant reproductive success by competing with pol...
While some studies have shown that ants that visit extrafloral nectaries may defend their host plant...
1. Ants show complex interactions with plants, both facultative and mutualistic, ranging from grazer...
As flower visitors, ants rarely benefit a plant, commonly disrupting pollination by deterring other ...
As flower visitors, ants rarely benefit a plant. They are poor pollinators, and can also disrupt pol...
The phenomenon of ant-guarding on Acacia trees is probably the best known case of a mutualism betwee...
As flower visitors, ants rarely benefit a plant. They are poor pollinators, and can also disrupt pol...
As flower visitors, ants rarely benefit a plant. They are poor pollinators, and can also disrupt pol...
Chemical signals emitted by plants are crucial to understanding the ecology and evolution of plant-a...
Ant-acacias represent a classic insect-plant mutualism: the ants defend the plant from attack by her...
Abstract only availableWorld economy, including agriculture and food production, is heavily dependan...
1Many flowers produce ant-repellent substances that prevent ants from discouraging pollinator visits...
Ants regularly visit flowers, but they may decrease plant reproductive success by competing with pol...
While some studies have shown that ants that visit extrafloral nectaries may defend their host plant...