The costs and benefits of cooperation between the Australian lycaenid butterfly,Jalmenus evagoras,and its attendant ants |
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Authors: | N. E. Pierce R. L. Kitching R. C. Buckley M. F. J. Taylor K. F. Benbow |
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Affiliation: | (1) Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, MS 02138 Cambridge, USA;(2) School of Australian Environmental Studies, Griffith University, Nathan, 4111 Brisbane, Queensland, Australia;(3) Department of Biogeography and Geomorphology, Research School of Pacific Studies, The Australian National University, 2600 Canberra, ACT, Australia;(4) Division of Entomology, CSIRO, Longpocket Laboratories, 4068 Indooroopilly, Queensland, Australia;(5) Present address: Department of Biology, Princeton University, 08544 Princeton, NJ, USA;(6) Present address: Department of Ecosystems Management, University of New England, 2351 Armidale, N.S.W., Australia;(7) Present address: The Australian Mineral Development Laboratories, P.O. Box 114, 5063 Eastwood, South Australia, Australia |
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Abstract: | Summary The larvae and pupae of the Australian lycaenid butterfly, Jalmenus evagoras associate mutualistically with ants in the genus Iridomyrmex. Four ant exclusion experiments in three field sites demonstrated that predation and parasitism of J. evagoras are so intense that individuals deprived of their attendant ants are unlikely to survive. Larvae and pupae of J. evagoras aggregate, and the mean number of attendant ants per individual increases with larval age and decreases with group size. Field observations showed that young larvae could gain more attendant ants per individual by joining the average size group of about 4 larvae than by foraging alone. Aggregation behaviour is influenced by ant attendance: young larvae and pupating fifth instars aggregated significantly more often on plants with ants than on plants where ants had been excluded. In return for tending and protecting the larvae, ants were rewarded by food secretions that can amount to as much as 409 mg dry biomass from a single host plant containing 62 larvae and pupae of J. evagoras over a 24 h period. Larval development in the laboratory lasted approximately a month, and larvae that were tended by ants developed almost 5 days faster than larvae that were not tended. However, tended individuals, particularly females, pupated at a significantly lower weight than their untended counterparts, and the adults that eclosed from these pupae were also lighter and smaller. On average, pupae that were tended by ants lost 25% more weight than untended pupae, and in contrast with larvae, they took longer to eclose than pupae that were not tended. These experimental results are discussed in terms of costs and benefits of association for both partners, and of aggregation for the lycaenids. |
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