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Project Contact Information
Project Classification Information
Project Information Project purpose: The goal is to determine how extrafloral nectar mediates ant abundance as well as to quantify the relationship between ants and pollinators in the aspen sunflower system. Project methodology: Organisms
Helianthella
quinquenervis (Asteraceae), or the aspen sunflower, occurs in rocky meadows
near patches of aspen (Populus tremuloides)
in and around the Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory, elevation 2871m. Flower
heads of aspen sunflowers tend to emerge in early to mid-July based on
elevation (Inouye 2008). Ants commonly seen foraging for extrafloral nectar on
the flowers include species in four genera: Formica,
Tapinoma, Myrmica, and Lasius. All
four genera forage on the plants several weeks prior to flower head emergence
and continue until flowering ceases and the flower heads wilt.
Study Sites
Research sites were located near
aspen stands in the rocky meadows on the west facing hill-slopes approximately
0.6 kilometers north of the Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory between
elevations 2927-2946m. Twenty plots were randomly assigned to patches of aspen
sunflowers as they occurred in the meadows.
Extrafloral Nectar
Production Manipulation
In order to determine the effect of
extrafloral nectar on ant abundance, I provided ants with an additional 15%
honey in water solution. This extra resource mimics additional production of extrafloral
nectar. Furthermore, a honey in water solution was chosen based on Inouye and
Inouye’s (1980) findings that aspen sunflower extrafloral nectar is especially
rich in amino acids. A small hole, (0.16
cm in diameter) was drilled using a drill bit at the bottom of a two mL
centrifuge tube so that ants were able to gain access to the solution. I placed the centrifuge tube behind the
flower head at the margins of the involucral bracts where extrafloral nectar is
secreted to mimic an increase in extrafloral nectar availability. The
centrifuge tube was attached to a 17 gauge steel wire with twist ties, which
was in turn twist-tied to the stalk of plant.
Restriction of Ant Access
To assess the importance of ant abundance and species
composition to herbivory and pollinator visitation I also manipulated ant
access to aspen sunflowers. One treatment completely restricted ant access to
the sunflower through the application of Tanglefoot (Grand Rapids, MI, USA) around the stalk. A second
treatment excluded the large dominant Formica sp. at the sites. This treatment consists of a plastic milk jug cap (3.5cm in diameter) with 0.80 cm holes
drilled through the top. These holes are small enough to deny larger Formica sp. access while large enough to
allow smaller, less aggressive ant species passage. Tanglefoot was applied to the edge of the
milk jug cap to prevent ants from climbing over the side. In order to account
for the potential effect of the steel wire, all experimental stalks received
steel wire attachments. Additionally,
all leaves and other material from neighboring plants that come in contact with
the experimental sunflower stalk above the treatment application were removed
to prevent their use as a bridge by ants.
During the weeks before the flower heads emerged, I
applied treatments to each of the sunflower stalks. This included application
and maintenance of Tanglefoot, Formica sp.
exclusion apparatuses, and additional extrafloral resources.
Starting
on July 16 when flower heads began to emerge, observations of pollinator activity
were made for ten-minute intervals between 0900 -1200h and 1300-1600h for eight
days from 16-24 July. At the conclusion
of the observational component, flower heads were collected to allow for seed
set counts as an evaluation of aspen sunflower reproductive fitness relative to
treatment application
Experimental Design
Manipulations of extrafloral nectar and ant abundance
were combined in a factorial experiment (Table 1). Each treatment was applied
to individual aspen sunflowers in a randomized-block design across 20 blocks
for a total of 100 plants.
Table 1: Experimental Treatments
Data recorded
Plant growth rate, condition (e.g. flower head
emergence and number, leaf number and damage, flower head wilting and number),
and ant abundance were measured weekly for three weeks for each aspen sunflower
plant from 9-22 July. Growth rate was measured as the change in height from the top of the terminal flower to the
ground. Leaf damage was measured by counting the number of herbivore-induced
holes present in the leaves.
Ant species abundance on each plant was recorded as
the number of each ant species on the plant during a 30 second recording period
in the morning (0800-1000h) and afternoon (1200-1600h). Counts were recorded
twice a week for three weeks from 11-23 July. Voucher specimens of each ant
species were collected for identification and deposited in the RMBL collection.
Project abstract: Data variables arrangement: columns Data variables description: A row is an observation of ant or non-ant arthropod occurrence on an individual aspen sunflower plant. This includes the stalk, cauline leaves, axillary and terminal flower heads of a single aspen sunflower Who audited these data? Are the metadata and associated data file of sufficient quality to repeat the study?
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