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The Effect of Temperature Increases on an Ant-Hemiptera-Plant Interaction. | LitMetric

The Effect of Temperature Increases on an Ant-Hemiptera-Plant Interaction.

PLoS One

Department of Zoology, La Trobe University, Melbourne, VIC 3086, Australia.

Published: July 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Global temperature rises are changing where species live and how ecosystems are structured, but their effects on interactions between multiple species aren't well understood.
  • Researchers studied the relationship between ants, scale insects, and plants under different predicted temperatures for Melbourne, finding that higher temperatures boost plant growth and ant activity while harming scale insects and honeydew production.
  • Although immediate effects of temperature increases are limited, by 2100, the decline in honeydew availability could significantly impact the interactions between these species, suggesting the need for more comprehensive field studies.

Article Abstract

Global temperature increases are significantly altering species distributions and the structure of ecological communities. However, the impact of temperature increases on multi- species interactions is poorly understood. We used an ant-Hemiptera-plant interaction to examine the potential outcomes of predicted temperature increases for each partner and for the availability of honeydew, a keystone resource in many forest ecosystems. We re-created this interaction in growth cabinets using predicted mean summer temperatures for Melbourne, Australia, for the years 2011 (23°C), 2050 (25°C) and 2100 (29°C), respectively, under an unmitigated greenhouse gas emission scenario. Plant growth and ant foraging activities increased, while scale insect growth, abundance and size, honeydew standing crop per tree and harvesting by ants decreased at 29°C, relative to lower temperatures (23 and 25°C). This led to decreased scale insect infestations of plants and reduced honeydew standing crop per tree at the highest temperature. At all temperatures, honeydew standing crop was lower when ants harvested the honeydew from scale insects, but the impact of ant harvesting was particularly significant at 29°C, where combined effects of temperature and ants reduced honeydew standing crop to below detectable levels. Although temperature increases in the next 35 years will have limited effects on this system, by the end of this century, warmer temperatures may cause the availability of honeydew to decline. Decline of honeydew may have far-reaching trophic effects on honeydew and ant-mediated interactions. However, field-based studies that consider the full complexity of ecosystems may be required to elucidate these impacts.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4951116PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0155131PLOS

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