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« Previous AbstractInduction and relaxation of extrafloral nectaries in response to simulated herbivory in young Mallotus japonicus plants    Next AbstractControl of mating preferences in mice by genes in the major histocompatibility complex »

J Plant Res


Title:Extrafloral nectary-bearing plant Mallotus japonicus uses different types of extrafloral nectaries to establish effective defense by ants
Author(s):Yamawo A; Suzuki N; Tagawa J;
Address:"Department of Applied Biological Sciences, Faculty of Agriculture, Saga University, Saga, 840-8502, Japan. yamawo.aki@gmail.com. Department of Applied Biological Sciences, Faculty of Agriculture, Saga University, Saga, 840-8502, Japan. Department of Biosphere-Geosphere System Science, Faculty of Informatics, Okayama University of Science, Okayama, 700-0005, Japan"
Journal Title:J Plant Res
Year:2019
Volume:20190621
Issue:4
Page Number:499 - 507
DOI: 10.1007/s10265-019-01119-5
ISSN/ISBN:1618-0860 (Electronic) 0918-9440 (Print) 0918-9440 (Linking)
Abstract:"Extrafloral nectary (EFN)-bearing plants attract ants to gain protection against herbivores. Some EFN-bearing plants possess different types of EFNs, which might have different effects on ants on the plants. Mallotus japonicus (Thunb.) Muell. Arg. (Euphorbiaceae) bears two types of EFNs, including a pair of large EFNs at the leaf base and many small EFNs along the leaf edge. This study aimed to determine the different roles of the two types of EFNs in biotic defense by ants. A field experiment was conducted to investigate the effect of leaf damage on EFN production and on the distribution pattern of ants. After leaf damage, the number of leaf edge EFNs increased in the leaves first-produced. The number of ants on the leaves also increased, and the foraging area of ants extended from the leaf base to the leaf tip. An EFN-covering field experiment revealed that leaf edge EFNs had a greater effect than leaf base EFNs on ant dispersal on leaves. The extended foraging area of ants resulted in an increase of encounter or attack rate against an experimentally placed herbivore, Spodoptera litura. These results suggest that M. japonicus plants control the foraging area of ants on their leaves using different types of EFNs in response to leaf damage, thus achieving a very effective biotic defense against herbivores by ants"
Keywords:Animals *Ants Herbivory Mallotus Plant/anatomy & histology/*physiology Plant Leaves/anatomy & histology/*physiology Plant Nectar/*physiology Spodoptera Ant-plant mutualism Biotic defense Efn Induced defense Leaf damage;
Notes:"MedlineYamawo, Akira Suzuki, Nobuhiko Tagawa, Jun eng 234305/Japan Society for the Promotion of Science/ 251712/Japan Society for the Promotion of Science/ Japan 2019/06/23 J Plant Res. 2019 Jul; 132(4):499-507. doi: 10.1007/s10265-019-01119-5. Epub 2019 Jun 21"

 
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