We’ve Got Ants In Our Plants!

What is this? A forest for ANTS?! Deep Look: https://youtu.be/fguo3HvWjb0
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Special thanks to Dr. Corrie Moreau from The Field Museum for helpful discussions while we were making this episode!

References/Learn More:

Edwards, David P., et al. “A plant needs ants like a dog needs fleas: Myrmelachista schumanni ants gall many tree species to create housing.” The American Naturalist 174.5 (2009): 734-740.

Frederickson, Megan E. “Conflict over Reproduction in an Ant‐Plant Symbiosis: Why Allomerus octoarticulatus Ants Sterilize Cordia nodosa Trees.” The American Naturalist 173.5 (2009): 675-681.

Frederickson, Megan E., and Deborah M. Gordon. “The intertwined population biology of two Amazonian myrmecophytes and their symbiotic ants.” Ecology 90.6 (2009): 1595-1607.

Haddad Junior, Vidal, Luiz Roberto Hernandes Bicudo, and Adílson Fransozo. “The Triplaria tree (Triplaris spp) and Pseudomyrmex ants: a symbiotic relationship with risks of attack for humans.” Revista da Sociedade Brasileira de Medicina Tropical 42.6 (2009): 727-729

Heil, Martin, et al. “Partner manipulation stabilises a horizontally transmitted mutualism.” Ecology letters 17.2 (2014): 185-192.

Hölldobler, Bert, and Edward O. Wilson. The ants. Harvard University Press, 1990.

Sanchez, Adriana, and Edwin Bellota. “Protection against herbivory in the mutualism between Pseudomyrmex dendroicus (Formicidae) and Triplaris americana (Polygonaceae).” Journal of Hymenoptera Research 46 (2015): 71.

Solano, Pascal-Jean, Monique Belin-Depoux, and Alain Dejean. “Formation and structure of food bodies in Cordia nodosa (Boraginaceae).” Comptes rendus biologies 328.7 (2005): 642-647.

Yu, Douglas W., and Naomi E. Pierce. “A castration parasite of an ant–plant mutualism.” Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences 265.1394 (1998): 375-382.

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It’s Okay To Be Smart is written and hosted by Joe Hanson, Ph.D.
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