Evolutionary ecology of symbiotic ant-plant relationships

Update Item Information
Publication Type Journal Article
School or College College of Science
Department Biology
Creator Davidson, Diane W.
Other Author McKey, Doyle
Title Evolutionary ecology of symbiotic ant-plant relationships
Date 1993
Description Abstract.--A tabular survey of ant-plant symbioses worldwide summarizes aspects of the evolutionary ecology of these associations. Remarkable similarities between ant-plant symbioses in disjunct tropical regions result from convergent and parallel evolution of similarly preadapted ants and plants. Competition among ants has driven evolutionary specialization in plant-ants and is the principal factor accounting for parallelism and convergence. As habitat specialization accompanied the evolutionary radiation of many myrmecophytes, frequent host shifts and de novo colonizations by habitat-specific ants both inhibited species-specific coevolution and co-cladogenesis, and magnified the diversity of mutualistic partners.
Type Text
Publisher International Society of Hymenopterists
Volume 2
Issue 1
First Page 13
Last Page 83
Subject Symbioses; Evolution; Taxonomic
Language eng
Bibliographic Citation Davidson, D. W., & McKey, D. (1993). Evolutionary ecology of symbiotic ant-plant relationships. Journal of Hymenoptera Research, 2(1), 13-83.
Rights Management (c) International Society of Hymenopterists
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 27,901,307 bytes
Identifier ir-main,4928
ARK ark:/87278/s6t15n8n
Setname ir_uspace
ID 707117
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6t15n8n
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