Trophic ecology of parabiotic ants: Do the partners have similar food niches?

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Trophic ecology of parabiotic ants: Do the partners have similar food niches? / Menzel, Florian; Staab, Michael; Chung, Arthur C. et al.
In: Austral Ecology, Vol. 37, No. 5, 08.2012, p. 537-546.

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Menzel F, Staab M, Chung AC, Gebauer G, Blüthgen N. Trophic ecology of parabiotic ants: Do the partners have similar food niches? Austral Ecology. 2012 Aug;37(5):537-546. doi: 10.1111/j.1442-9993.2011.02290.x

Bibtex

@article{21dc976c801e44ecb30aa8d852b7eb09,
title = "Trophic ecology of parabiotic ants: Do the partners have similar food niches?",
abstract = "Organisms associated with another species may experience both costs and benefits from their partner. One of these costs is competition, which is the more likely if the two species are ecologically similar. Parabioses are associations between two ant species that share a nest and often attend the same food sources. Albeit parabioses are probably mutualistic, parabiotic partners may compete for food. We therefore investigated feeding niches and dietary overlap of two parabiotically associated ants in Borneo using cafeteria experiments and stable isotope analyses. The two species strongly differed in their food choices. While Crematogaster modiglianii mostly foraged at carbohydrate-rich baits, Camponotus rufifemur preferred urea-rich sources. Both species also consumed animal protein. The 15N concentration in Ca.rufifemur workers was consistently lower than in Cr.modiglianii. Camponotus rufifemur but not Cr.modiglianii possesses microbial endosymbionts, which can metabolize urea and synthesize essential amino acids. Its lower 15N signature may result from a relatively higher intake of plant-based or otherwise 15N-depleted nitrogen. Isotopic signatures of the two partners in the same parabiosis showed strongly parallel variation across nests. As we did not find evidence for spatial autocorrelation, this correlation suggests an overlap of food sources between the two ant species. Based on model simulations, we estimated a diet overlap of 22-66% for nitrogen sources and 45-74% for carbon sources. The overlap may arise from either joint exploitation of the same food sources or trophallactic exchange of food. This suggests an intense trophic interaction and potential for competition between the parabiotic partners.",
keywords = "Ecosystems Research, dietary overlap, Formicidae, Malaysia, stable isotope, trophic niche, dietary overlap, Formicidae, Malaysia, stable isotope, trophic niche, Biology",
author = "Florian Menzel and Michael Staab and Chung, {Arthur C.} and Gerhard Gebauer and Nico Bl{\"u}thgen",
year = "2012",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1111/j.1442-9993.2011.02290.x",
language = "English",
volume = "37",
pages = "537--546",
journal = "Austral Ecology",
issn = "1442-9985",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd.",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Trophic ecology of parabiotic ants: Do the partners have similar food niches?

AU - Menzel, Florian

AU - Staab, Michael

AU - Chung, Arthur C.

AU - Gebauer, Gerhard

AU - Blüthgen, Nico

PY - 2012/8

Y1 - 2012/8

N2 - Organisms associated with another species may experience both costs and benefits from their partner. One of these costs is competition, which is the more likely if the two species are ecologically similar. Parabioses are associations between two ant species that share a nest and often attend the same food sources. Albeit parabioses are probably mutualistic, parabiotic partners may compete for food. We therefore investigated feeding niches and dietary overlap of two parabiotically associated ants in Borneo using cafeteria experiments and stable isotope analyses. The two species strongly differed in their food choices. While Crematogaster modiglianii mostly foraged at carbohydrate-rich baits, Camponotus rufifemur preferred urea-rich sources. Both species also consumed animal protein. The 15N concentration in Ca.rufifemur workers was consistently lower than in Cr.modiglianii. Camponotus rufifemur but not Cr.modiglianii possesses microbial endosymbionts, which can metabolize urea and synthesize essential amino acids. Its lower 15N signature may result from a relatively higher intake of plant-based or otherwise 15N-depleted nitrogen. Isotopic signatures of the two partners in the same parabiosis showed strongly parallel variation across nests. As we did not find evidence for spatial autocorrelation, this correlation suggests an overlap of food sources between the two ant species. Based on model simulations, we estimated a diet overlap of 22-66% for nitrogen sources and 45-74% for carbon sources. The overlap may arise from either joint exploitation of the same food sources or trophallactic exchange of food. This suggests an intense trophic interaction and potential for competition between the parabiotic partners.

AB - Organisms associated with another species may experience both costs and benefits from their partner. One of these costs is competition, which is the more likely if the two species are ecologically similar. Parabioses are associations between two ant species that share a nest and often attend the same food sources. Albeit parabioses are probably mutualistic, parabiotic partners may compete for food. We therefore investigated feeding niches and dietary overlap of two parabiotically associated ants in Borneo using cafeteria experiments and stable isotope analyses. The two species strongly differed in their food choices. While Crematogaster modiglianii mostly foraged at carbohydrate-rich baits, Camponotus rufifemur preferred urea-rich sources. Both species also consumed animal protein. The 15N concentration in Ca.rufifemur workers was consistently lower than in Cr.modiglianii. Camponotus rufifemur but not Cr.modiglianii possesses microbial endosymbionts, which can metabolize urea and synthesize essential amino acids. Its lower 15N signature may result from a relatively higher intake of plant-based or otherwise 15N-depleted nitrogen. Isotopic signatures of the two partners in the same parabiosis showed strongly parallel variation across nests. As we did not find evidence for spatial autocorrelation, this correlation suggests an overlap of food sources between the two ant species. Based on model simulations, we estimated a diet overlap of 22-66% for nitrogen sources and 45-74% for carbon sources. The overlap may arise from either joint exploitation of the same food sources or trophallactic exchange of food. This suggests an intense trophic interaction and potential for competition between the parabiotic partners.

KW - Ecosystems Research

KW - dietary overlap

KW - Formicidae

KW - Malaysia

KW - stable isotope

KW - trophic niche

KW - dietary overlap

KW - Formicidae

KW - Malaysia

KW - stable isotope

KW - trophic niche

KW - Biology

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84864146895&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1111/j.1442-9993.2011.02290.x

DO - 10.1111/j.1442-9993.2011.02290.x

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 37

SP - 537

EP - 546

JO - Austral Ecology

JF - Austral Ecology

SN - 1442-9985

IS - 5

ER -

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