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Digestive mutualism in a pitcher plant supports the monotonic rather than hump-shaped stress-gradient hypothesis model.
Leong, Felicia Wei Shan; Lam, Weng Ngai; Tan, Hugh Tiang Wah.
Affiliation
  • Leong FWS; Department of Biological Sciences, National University of Singapore, 14 Science Drive 4, Singapore, 117543, Republic of Singapore.
  • Lam WN; Department of Biological Sciences, National University of Singapore, 14 Science Drive 4, Singapore, 117543, Republic of Singapore. wengngai@u.nus.edu.
  • Tan HTW; Department of Biological Sciences, National University of Singapore, 14 Science Drive 4, Singapore, 117543, Republic of Singapore.
Oecologia ; 190(3): 523-534, 2019 Jul.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31062163
ABSTRACT
The stress-gradient hypothesis (SGH) predicts that the strength and frequency of facilitative interactions increase monotonically with increasing environmental stress, but some empirical studies have found this decrease at extreme stress levels, suggesting a hump-shaped SGH instead. However, empirical studies of the SGH are often hindered by confounding resource and non-resource stress gradients. Nepenthes pitcher plants trap animal prey using modified-leaf pitfall traps which are also inhabited by organisms known as inquilines. Inquilines may assist pitchers in the digestion of trapped prey. This interaction is known as a digestive mutualism and is both mutualistic and facilitative by definition. Inquiline species may also facilitate each other via processing chain commensalisms. We used in vitro experiments to examine the isolated effect of resource stress on the outcomes of two facilitative interactions (i) digestive mutualism-facilitation of pitcher nutrient sequestration by two inquiline dipteran larvae, culicids and phorids; (ii) processing chain commensalism-facilitation between these two inquiline taxa. The net nutritional benefit of phorids on N. gracilis was found to conform more to a monotonic rather than hump-shaped SGH model. However, the effect of culicids on N. gracilis and the effects of culicids and phorids on each other were weak. These findings provide compelling evidence that changes in facilitation along an isolated resource stress gradient conform to the predictions of the monotonic SGH model rather than that of the revised hump-shaped model, and highlight the importance of isolating stress gradients in empirical tests of the SGH.
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Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Stress, Physiological / Symbiosis Type of study: Prognostic_studies Limits: Animals Language: En Journal: Oecologia Year: 2019 Type: Article

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Stress, Physiological / Symbiosis Type of study: Prognostic_studies Limits: Animals Language: En Journal: Oecologia Year: 2019 Type: Article