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Characterizing the Cauline Domatia of Two Newly Discovered Ecuadorian Ant Plants in Piper: An Example of Convergent Evolution

The stems of some myrmecophytes in Piper are used as domatia by resident ant colonies. Hollow, ant-occupied stems were previously known only in four species of southern Central American Piper, all members of Section Macrostachys. Here we present two additional, unrelated, hollow-stemmed myrmecophyte...

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Autores principales: Tepe, Eric J., Kelley, Walter A., Rodriguez-Castañeda, Genoveva, Dyer, Lee A.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: University of Wisconsin Library 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3011874/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19613856
http://dx.doi.org/10.1673/031.009.2701
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author Tepe, Eric J.
Kelley, Walter A.
Rodriguez-Castañeda, Genoveva
Dyer, Lee A.
author_facet Tepe, Eric J.
Kelley, Walter A.
Rodriguez-Castañeda, Genoveva
Dyer, Lee A.
author_sort Tepe, Eric J.
collection PubMed
description The stems of some myrmecophytes in Piper are used as domatia by resident ant colonies. Hollow, ant-occupied stems were previously known only in four species of southern Central American Piper, all members of Section Macrostachys. Here we present two additional, unrelated, hollow-stemmed myrmecophytes from Ecuador: P. immutatum and P. pterocladum (members of sections Radula and Peltobryon, respectively). Although similar superficially, stem cavities of the Ecuadorian Piper species differ morphologically and developmentally from those of Central American taxa. The stem cavities of P. immutatum, and possibly P. pterocladum, are formed during stem development, and begin forming only a few millimeters behind the apical meristem. This mode of cavity formation differs markedly from myrmecophytes in section Macrostachys, where the stems remain solid unless excavated by the specialized ant partner Pheidole bicornis. The stems of P. immutatum and P. pterocladum do not produce wound-response tissue around the cavity, unlike the stems in section Macrostachys. The entrance holes in stems of P. immutatum are formed through apoptotic processes and are located at each node below the petiole, whereas those in section Macrostachys are excavated by the ants in the leaf axil. This study documents convergent evolution of ant-plant associations in Piper, and emphasizes the need for careful comparison of apparently homologous, ant-associated structures in specialized myrmecophytes.
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spelling pubmed-30118742011-09-01 Characterizing the Cauline Domatia of Two Newly Discovered Ecuadorian Ant Plants in Piper: An Example of Convergent Evolution Tepe, Eric J. Kelley, Walter A. Rodriguez-Castañeda, Genoveva Dyer, Lee A. J Insect Sci Article The stems of some myrmecophytes in Piper are used as domatia by resident ant colonies. Hollow, ant-occupied stems were previously known only in four species of southern Central American Piper, all members of Section Macrostachys. Here we present two additional, unrelated, hollow-stemmed myrmecophytes from Ecuador: P. immutatum and P. pterocladum (members of sections Radula and Peltobryon, respectively). Although similar superficially, stem cavities of the Ecuadorian Piper species differ morphologically and developmentally from those of Central American taxa. The stem cavities of P. immutatum, and possibly P. pterocladum, are formed during stem development, and begin forming only a few millimeters behind the apical meristem. This mode of cavity formation differs markedly from myrmecophytes in section Macrostachys, where the stems remain solid unless excavated by the specialized ant partner Pheidole bicornis. The stems of P. immutatum and P. pterocladum do not produce wound-response tissue around the cavity, unlike the stems in section Macrostachys. The entrance holes in stems of P. immutatum are formed through apoptotic processes and are located at each node below the petiole, whereas those in section Macrostachys are excavated by the ants in the leaf axil. This study documents convergent evolution of ant-plant associations in Piper, and emphasizes the need for careful comparison of apparently homologous, ant-associated structures in specialized myrmecophytes. University of Wisconsin Library 2009-06-02 /pmc/articles/PMC3011874/ /pubmed/19613856 http://dx.doi.org/10.1673/031.009.2701 Text en © 2009 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Tepe, Eric J.
Kelley, Walter A.
Rodriguez-Castañeda, Genoveva
Dyer, Lee A.
Characterizing the Cauline Domatia of Two Newly Discovered Ecuadorian Ant Plants in Piper: An Example of Convergent Evolution
title Characterizing the Cauline Domatia of Two Newly Discovered Ecuadorian Ant Plants in Piper: An Example of Convergent Evolution
title_full Characterizing the Cauline Domatia of Two Newly Discovered Ecuadorian Ant Plants in Piper: An Example of Convergent Evolution
title_fullStr Characterizing the Cauline Domatia of Two Newly Discovered Ecuadorian Ant Plants in Piper: An Example of Convergent Evolution
title_full_unstemmed Characterizing the Cauline Domatia of Two Newly Discovered Ecuadorian Ant Plants in Piper: An Example of Convergent Evolution
title_short Characterizing the Cauline Domatia of Two Newly Discovered Ecuadorian Ant Plants in Piper: An Example of Convergent Evolution
title_sort characterizing the cauline domatia of two newly discovered ecuadorian ant plants in piper: an example of convergent evolution
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3011874/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19613856
http://dx.doi.org/10.1673/031.009.2701
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