Fungi as mutualistic partners in ant-plant interactions

Veronika Mayer, Hermann Voglmayr, Rumsais Blatrix, Jérôme Orivel, Céline Leroy

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

Associations between fungi and ants living in mutualistic relationship with plants (“plant-ants”) have been known for a long time. However, only in recent years has the mutualistic nature, frequency, and geographical extent of associations between tropical arboreal ants with fungi of the ascomycete order Chaetothyriales and Capnodiales (belonging to the so-called “Black Fungi”) become clear. Two groups of arboreal ants displaying different nesting strategies are associated with ascomycete fungi: carton-building ants that construct nest walls and galleries on stems, branches or below leaves which are overgrown by fungal hyphae, and plant-ants that make their nests inside living plants (myrmecophytes) in plant provided cavities (domatia) where ants cultivate fungi in small delimited “patches”. In this review we summarize the current knowledge about these unsuspected plant-ant-fungus interactions. The data suggest, that at least some of these ant-associated fungi seem to have coevolved with ants over a long period of time and have developed specific adaptations to this lifestyle.
Original languageEnglish
Article number1213997
Number of pages14
JournalFrontiers in Fungal Biology
Volume2023
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 106008 Botany
  • 106012 Evolutionary research
  • 106042 Systematic botany

Keywords

  • ants
  • Chaetothyriales
  • Capnodiales
  • SPECIFICITY
  • TRANSMISSION
  • EVOLUTIONARY HISTORY
  • Function
  • transmission
  • function
  • specificity
  • evolutionary history

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