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      Disentangling nutritional pathways linking leafcutter ants and their co‐evolved fungal symbionts using stable isotopes

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          Abstract

          Leafcutter ants are the ultimate insect superorganisms, with up to millions of physiologically specialized workers cooperating to cut and transport vegetation and then convert it into compost used to cultivate co‐evolved fungi, domesticated over millions of years. We tested hypotheses about the nutrient‐processing dynamics governing this functional integration, tracing 15N‐ and 13C‐enriched substrates through colonies of the leafcutter ant Atta colombica. Our results highlight striking performance efficiencies, including rapid conversion (within 2 d) of harvested nutrients into edible fungal tissue (swollen hyphal tips called gongylidia) in the center of fungus gardens, while also highlighting that much of each colony's foraging effort resulted in substrate placed directly in the trash. We also find nutrient‐specific processing dynamics both within and across layers of the fungus garden, and in ant consumers. Larvae exhibited higher overall levels of 15N and 13C enrichment than adult workers, supporting that the majority of fungal productivity is allocated to colony growth. Foragers assimilated 13C‐labeled glucose during its ingestion, but required several days to metabolically process ingested 15N‐labeled ammonium nitrate. This processing timeline helps resolve a 40‐yr old hypothesis, that foragers (but apparently not gardeners or larvae) bypass their fungal crops to directly assimilate some of the nutrients they ingest outside the nest. Tracing these nutritional pathways with stable isotopes helps visualize how physiological integration within symbiotic networks gives rise to the ecologically dominant herbivory of leafcutter ants in habitats ranging from Argentina to the southern United States.

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          Explaining the abundance of ants in lowland tropical rainforest canopies.

          The extraordinary abundance of ants in tropical rainforest canopies has led to speculation that numerous arboreal ant taxa feed principally as "herbivores" of plant and insect exudates. Based on nitrogen (N) isotope ratios of plants, known herbivores, arthropod predators, and ants from Amazonia and Borneo, we find that many arboreal ant species obtain little N through predation and scavenging. Microsymbionts of ants and their hemipteran trophobionts might play key roles in the nutrition of taxa specializing on N-poor exudates. For plants, the combined costs of biotic defenses and herbivory by ants and tended Hemiptera are substantial, and forest losses to insect herbivores vastly exceed current estimates.
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            Complementary symbiont contributions to plant decomposition in a fungus-farming termite.

            Termites normally rely on gut symbionts to decompose organic matter but the Macrotermitinae domesticated Termitomyces fungi to produce their own food. This transition was accompanied by a shift in the composition of the gut microbiota, but the complementary roles of these bacteria in the symbiosis have remained enigmatic. We obtained high-quality annotated draft genomes of the termite Macrotermes natalensis, its Termitomyces symbiont, and gut metagenomes from workers, soldiers, and a queen. We show that members from 111 of the 128 known glycoside hydrolase families are represented in the symbiosis, that Termitomyces has the genomic capacity to handle complex carbohydrates, and that worker gut microbes primarily contribute enzymes for final digestion of oligosaccharides. This apparent division of labor is consistent with the Macrotermes gut microbes being most important during the second passage of comb material through the termite gut, after a first gut passage where the crude plant substrate is inoculated with Termitomyces asexual spores so that initial fungal growth and polysaccharide decomposition can proceed with high efficiency. Complex conversion of biomass in termite mounds thus appears to be mainly accomplished by complementary cooperation between a domesticated fungal monoculture and a specialized bacterial community. In sharp contrast, the gut microbiota of the queen had highly reduced plant decomposition potential, suggesting that mature reproductives digest fungal material provided by workers rather than plant substrate.
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              Assessment of international reference materials for isotope-ratio analysis (IUPAC Technical Report)

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                jonathan.shik@gmail.com
                Journal
                Ecology
                Ecology
                10.1002/(ISSN)1939-9170
                ECY
                Ecology
                John Wiley and Sons Inc. (Hoboken )
                0012-9658
                1939-9170
                01 August 2018
                September 2018
                : 99
                : 9 ( doiID: 10.1002/ecy.2018.99.issue-9 )
                : 1999-2009
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] Centre for Social Evolution Department of Biology University of Copenhagen Universitetsparken 15 2100 Copenhagen Denmark
                [ 2 ] Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Apartado 0843‐03092 Balboa Ancon Republic of Panama
                [ 3 ] CREAF Cerdanyola del Vallès ES‐08193 Catalunya Spain
                [ 4 ] Terrestrial Ecology Section Department of Biology University of Copenhagen Universitetsparken 15 2100 Copenhagen Denmark
                Author notes
                Article
                ECY2431
                10.1002/ecy.2431
                6174977
                30067862
                52371eec-3abb-4326-a0f9-36ff7cf8908e
                © 2018 The Authors Ecology published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of Ecological Society of America.

                This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 30 October 2017
                : 30 April 2018
                : 19 May 2018
                Page count
                Figures: 5, Tables: 1, Pages: 11, Words: 9067
                Funding
                Funded by: Postdoctoral Fellowship from a Marie Curie International Incoming Fellowship
                Award ID: 327940 INSEAME
                Funded by: Centre for Social Evolution at the University of Copenhagen
                Funded by: Ramón y Cajal research contract by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness
                Award ID: RYC‐2015‐18448
                Categories
                Article
                Articles
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                ecy2431
                September 2018
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_NLMPMC version:version=5.5.0 mode:remove_FC converted:08.10.2018

                13c,15n,attine ants,carbon and nitrogen isotopes,nutritional ecology,tropical rainforest

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