Data set for a meta-analysis of context dependent interaction outcomes in ant-plant protection mutualisms

Context dependency, variation in the outcome of species interactions with biotic and abiotic conditions, is increasingly considered ubiquitous among mutualisms. Despite several qualitative reviews of many individual empirical studies, there has been little quantitative synthesis examining the genera...

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Other Authors: ScottChamberlain
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10255/dryad.23014
http://metacat.lternet.edu/knb/metacat/esa.56.2/xml
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spelling ftdryad:oai:v1.datadryad.org:10255/dryad.23014 2023-05-15T13:58:24+02:00 Data set for a meta-analysis of context dependent interaction outcomes in ant-plant protection mutualisms ScottChamberlain All continents except Antarctica -76.5000 W 149.5000 E 42.3997 N -35.6333 S 2008 2008-12-19 http://hdl.handle.net/10255/dryad.23014 http://metacat.lternet.edu/knb/metacat/esa.56.2/xml unknown http://metacat.lternet.edu/knb/metacat/esa.56.2/xml esa.56.2 http://hdl.handle.net/10255/dryad.23014 othercite the data set in publications meta-analysis ant-plant protection mutualism context dependent dataset 2008 ftdryad 2020-01-01T14:46:42Z Context dependency, variation in the outcome of species interactions with biotic and abiotic conditions, is increasingly considered ubiquitous among mutualisms. Despite several qualitative reviews of many individual empirical studies, there has been little quantitative synthesis examining the generality of context dependency, or conditions that may promote it. We conducted a meta-analysis of ant-plant protection mutualisms to examine the generality of context dependent effects of ants on herbivory and plant performance (growth, reproduction). Our results show that ant effects on plants are not generally context dependent, but instead are routinely positive and rarely neutral, as overall effect sizes of ants in reducing herbivory and increasing plant performance were positive and significantly greater than zero. The magnitude of these positive effects did vary, however. Variation in plant performance was not explained by the type of biotic or abiotic factor examined, including plant rewards (extrafloral nectar, food bodies, domatia), ant species richness, plant growth form, or latitude. With the exception of plant growth form, these factors did contribute to the effects of ants in reducing herbivory. Reductions in herbivory were greater for plants with than without domatia, and greatest for plants with both domatia and food bodies. Effect sizes of ants in reducing herbivory decreased, but remained positive, with latitude and ant species richness. Effect sizes in reducing herbivory were greater in tropical versus temperate systems. Although ant-plant interactions have been pivotal in the study of context dependency of mutualisms, our results, along with other recent meta-analyses, indicate that context dependency may not be a general feature of mutualistic interactions. Rather, ant-plant protection mutualisms appear to be routinely positive for plants, and only occasionally neutral. Dataset Antarc* Antarctica Dryad Digital Repository (Duke University)
institution Open Polar
collection Dryad Digital Repository (Duke University)
op_collection_id ftdryad
language unknown
topic meta-analysis
ant-plant
protection
mutualism
context dependent
spellingShingle meta-analysis
ant-plant
protection
mutualism
context dependent
Data set for a meta-analysis of context dependent interaction outcomes in ant-plant protection mutualisms
topic_facet meta-analysis
ant-plant
protection
mutualism
context dependent
description Context dependency, variation in the outcome of species interactions with biotic and abiotic conditions, is increasingly considered ubiquitous among mutualisms. Despite several qualitative reviews of many individual empirical studies, there has been little quantitative synthesis examining the generality of context dependency, or conditions that may promote it. We conducted a meta-analysis of ant-plant protection mutualisms to examine the generality of context dependent effects of ants on herbivory and plant performance (growth, reproduction). Our results show that ant effects on plants are not generally context dependent, but instead are routinely positive and rarely neutral, as overall effect sizes of ants in reducing herbivory and increasing plant performance were positive and significantly greater than zero. The magnitude of these positive effects did vary, however. Variation in plant performance was not explained by the type of biotic or abiotic factor examined, including plant rewards (extrafloral nectar, food bodies, domatia), ant species richness, plant growth form, or latitude. With the exception of plant growth form, these factors did contribute to the effects of ants in reducing herbivory. Reductions in herbivory were greater for plants with than without domatia, and greatest for plants with both domatia and food bodies. Effect sizes of ants in reducing herbivory decreased, but remained positive, with latitude and ant species richness. Effect sizes in reducing herbivory were greater in tropical versus temperate systems. Although ant-plant interactions have been pivotal in the study of context dependency of mutualisms, our results, along with other recent meta-analyses, indicate that context dependency may not be a general feature of mutualistic interactions. Rather, ant-plant protection mutualisms appear to be routinely positive for plants, and only occasionally neutral.
author2 ScottChamberlain
format Dataset
title Data set for a meta-analysis of context dependent interaction outcomes in ant-plant protection mutualisms
title_short Data set for a meta-analysis of context dependent interaction outcomes in ant-plant protection mutualisms
title_full Data set for a meta-analysis of context dependent interaction outcomes in ant-plant protection mutualisms
title_fullStr Data set for a meta-analysis of context dependent interaction outcomes in ant-plant protection mutualisms
title_full_unstemmed Data set for a meta-analysis of context dependent interaction outcomes in ant-plant protection mutualisms
title_sort data set for a meta-analysis of context dependent interaction outcomes in ant-plant protection mutualisms
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/10255/dryad.23014
http://metacat.lternet.edu/knb/metacat/esa.56.2/xml
op_coverage All continents except Antarctica
-76.5000 W 149.5000 E 42.3997 N -35.6333 S
2008
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
op_relation http://metacat.lternet.edu/knb/metacat/esa.56.2/xml
esa.56.2
http://hdl.handle.net/10255/dryad.23014
op_rights othercite the data set in publications
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