Effect of artificial sugar supply on ant-aphid interactions in protected horticulture
Metadata
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Research Square
Materia
Biological control Cotton aphid Aphis gossypii Mutualism Predation
Date
2024-02-13Referencia bibliográfica
Rodríguez, Estefanía et al. Effect of artificial sugar supply on ant-aphid interactions in protected horticulture. https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3940965/v1
Sponsorship
Junta de Andalucía P20-00697; "ERDF A way of making Europe” (European Union); 02INIA (Spain); DOC-INIA post-doctoral; BES 2017-079978 pre-doctoralAbstract
Ant tending aphid colonies reduce the effectiveness of biological control on aphids which is detrimental
to the crop plants. However, their mutualistic interaction is complex and, depending on the quantity and
quality of the sugar that aphids produce, it may change to a predator-prey interaction. The objective of
this study is to test this hypothesis by providing ants with a high-quality sugar supply with the predictions
that ants with an extra-sugar source should more often predate on aphids and, therefore, the abundance
of aphids on the experimental plants should be reduced. We carried out an experiment on pepper plants,
inoculated with the aphid Aphis gossypii in greenhouses with naturally occurring Tapinoma ibericum
colonies in three different periods. Our results showed a significant reduction in aphid colonies
abundance and greater aphid predation by the ants in plants with an artificial sugar supply. However, the
expected effects greatly varied among greenhouses and seasons. A negative effect on aphid abundance
was mainly detected in autumn, while a positive effect on ants predating aphids were mainly detected in
summer, when a lower ant activity on the plants occurred. Although our experimental results show that
the artificial sugar supply changes ant behavior from tending aphids to preying on them, the large
variation in the expected effects suggests that some other unconsidered factors influence their strength.
Consequently, future advances should focus on detecting factors driving observed variations among
study areas and year seasons, to continue research on using biological control for aphids in horticultural
protected crops.