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Department of Botany, 316 Pearson Hall, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio 45056 USA
ABSTRACT
Plants possess a variety of structures that harbor ant nests, and the morphology of these domatia determines the nature of antplant mutualisms in a given plant species. In this study, we report on the differences in anatomy between myrmecophytes of Piper, which are regularly excavated by an obligate ant mutualist (Pheidole bicornis) and nonmyrmecophytes of Piper, which consistently have solid stems. Stems of excavated plant species lacked outward evidence of modification; however, striking anatomical differences were apparent between hollow-stemmed species before excavation and the remainder of the solid-stemmed species studied. Prior to excavation by ants, stems of myrmecophytes were characterized by strongly heterogeneous piths in which a large, central area had relatively large cells lacking intracellular crystals with a periphery of smaller cells containing numerous crystals. The domatium excavated by the ants was restricted to the large-celled region. This is the first report of the absence of crystals in ant-excavated portions of stems of myrmecophytes. Cauline domatia became lined with 38 cell layers of suberized wound tissue, which may have an impact on nutrient absorption by Piper myrmecophytes.
Key Words: antplant mutualisms cauline domatia heterogeneous pith intracellular crystals Pheidole bicornis; Piper Piperaceae stem anatomy
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