Patterns of host ant use by sympatric populations of Maculinea alcon and M. 'rebeli' in the Carpathian Basin

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Patterns of host ant use by sympatric populations of Maculinea alcon and M. 'rebeli' in the Carpathian Basin. / Tartally, A.; Nash, David Richard; Lengyel, S.; Varga, Z.

In: Insectes Sociaux, Vol. 55, No. 4, 2008, p. 370-381.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Tartally, A, Nash, DR, Lengyel, S & Varga, Z 2008, 'Patterns of host ant use by sympatric populations of Maculinea alcon and M. 'rebeli' in the Carpathian Basin', Insectes Sociaux, vol. 55, no. 4, pp. 370-381. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00040-008-1015-4

APA

Tartally, A., Nash, D. R., Lengyel, S., & Varga, Z. (2008). Patterns of host ant use by sympatric populations of Maculinea alcon and M. 'rebeli' in the Carpathian Basin. Insectes Sociaux, 55(4), 370-381. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00040-008-1015-4

Vancouver

Tartally A, Nash DR, Lengyel S, Varga Z. Patterns of host ant use by sympatric populations of Maculinea alcon and M. 'rebeli' in the Carpathian Basin. Insectes Sociaux. 2008;55(4):370-381. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00040-008-1015-4

Author

Tartally, A. ; Nash, David Richard ; Lengyel, S. ; Varga, Z. / Patterns of host ant use by sympatric populations of Maculinea alcon and M. 'rebeli' in the Carpathian Basin. In: Insectes Sociaux. 2008 ; Vol. 55, No. 4. pp. 370-381.

Bibtex

@article{05e2ddd0da9111dd9473000ea68e967b,
title = "Patterns of host ant use by sympatric populations of Maculinea alcon and M. 'rebeli' in the Carpathian Basin",
abstract = "Maculinea butterflies show social parasitism via obligatory myrmecophily as their larvae are adopted and raised to pupation by Myrmica ants. Suitable hosts differ for different Maculinea species, and host ant specificity can further differ at the population-level. Although early studies suggested single ant species as main hosts for each Maculinea species, it has recently become clear that their host ant specificity is more complex. Maculinea alcon and Maculinea {\textquoteleft}rebeli{\textquoteright} have variously been separated according to adult and larval morphology, phenology, and their use of different ecosystems, including host plant and host ant species. However, recent genetic evidence has questioned their separation as good species. Here we compare the use of host ants by M. alcon and M. {\textquoteleft}rebeli{\textquoteright} at the regional scale in NE-Hungary and Transylvania (Romania), where molecular studies have found no species-level separation between the two forms. We opened 778 nests of Myrmica ants and searched for Maculinea specimens (larvae, pupae and exuviae) shortly before imago emergence from the nest in seven M. alcon sites, six M. {\textquoteleft}rebeli{\textquoteright}- sites and one site where both M. alcon and M. {\textquoteleft}rebeli{\textquoteright} are syntopic. In all, Maculinea caterpillars were found in the nests of seven different ant species (M. alcon was recorded mainly with Myrmica scabrinodis and occasionally with M. salina and M. vandeli; M. {\textquoteleft}rebeli{\textquoteright} used mainly M. scabrinodis, M. sabuleti and M. schencki and occasionally M. lonae and M. specioides). Myrmica scabrinodis was found to be a general host of both M. alcon and M. {\textquoteleft}rebeli{\textquoteright}, which is the first record for a common host ant of these two closely related butterflies within the same region. However there were also differences in host ant use patterns between the sites occupied by the two Maculinea taxa, which reflect differences in Myrmica communities between the two types of habitat. Possible explanations for the similar but not identical host use patterns of M. alcon and M. {\textquoteleft}rebeli{\textquoteright}, and their relevance for the question of whether they are separate species are discussed.",
author = "A. Tartally and Nash, {David Richard} and S. Lengyel and Z. Varga",
note = "Keywords: Myrmica - myrmecophily - social parasitism - host specificity",
year = "2008",
doi = "10.1007/s00040-008-1015-4",
language = "English",
volume = "55",
pages = "370--381",
journal = "Insectes Sociaux",
issn = "0020-1812",
publisher = "Springer Basel AG",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Patterns of host ant use by sympatric populations of Maculinea alcon and M. 'rebeli' in the Carpathian Basin

AU - Tartally, A.

AU - Nash, David Richard

AU - Lengyel, S.

AU - Varga, Z.

N1 - Keywords: Myrmica - myrmecophily - social parasitism - host specificity

PY - 2008

Y1 - 2008

N2 - Maculinea butterflies show social parasitism via obligatory myrmecophily as their larvae are adopted and raised to pupation by Myrmica ants. Suitable hosts differ for different Maculinea species, and host ant specificity can further differ at the population-level. Although early studies suggested single ant species as main hosts for each Maculinea species, it has recently become clear that their host ant specificity is more complex. Maculinea alcon and Maculinea ‘rebeli’ have variously been separated according to adult and larval morphology, phenology, and their use of different ecosystems, including host plant and host ant species. However, recent genetic evidence has questioned their separation as good species. Here we compare the use of host ants by M. alcon and M. ‘rebeli’ at the regional scale in NE-Hungary and Transylvania (Romania), where molecular studies have found no species-level separation between the two forms. We opened 778 nests of Myrmica ants and searched for Maculinea specimens (larvae, pupae and exuviae) shortly before imago emergence from the nest in seven M. alcon sites, six M. ‘rebeli’- sites and one site where both M. alcon and M. ‘rebeli’ are syntopic. In all, Maculinea caterpillars were found in the nests of seven different ant species (M. alcon was recorded mainly with Myrmica scabrinodis and occasionally with M. salina and M. vandeli; M. ‘rebeli’ used mainly M. scabrinodis, M. sabuleti and M. schencki and occasionally M. lonae and M. specioides). Myrmica scabrinodis was found to be a general host of both M. alcon and M. ‘rebeli’, which is the first record for a common host ant of these two closely related butterflies within the same region. However there were also differences in host ant use patterns between the sites occupied by the two Maculinea taxa, which reflect differences in Myrmica communities between the two types of habitat. Possible explanations for the similar but not identical host use patterns of M. alcon and M. ‘rebeli’, and their relevance for the question of whether they are separate species are discussed.

AB - Maculinea butterflies show social parasitism via obligatory myrmecophily as their larvae are adopted and raised to pupation by Myrmica ants. Suitable hosts differ for different Maculinea species, and host ant specificity can further differ at the population-level. Although early studies suggested single ant species as main hosts for each Maculinea species, it has recently become clear that their host ant specificity is more complex. Maculinea alcon and Maculinea ‘rebeli’ have variously been separated according to adult and larval morphology, phenology, and their use of different ecosystems, including host plant and host ant species. However, recent genetic evidence has questioned their separation as good species. Here we compare the use of host ants by M. alcon and M. ‘rebeli’ at the regional scale in NE-Hungary and Transylvania (Romania), where molecular studies have found no species-level separation between the two forms. We opened 778 nests of Myrmica ants and searched for Maculinea specimens (larvae, pupae and exuviae) shortly before imago emergence from the nest in seven M. alcon sites, six M. ‘rebeli’- sites and one site where both M. alcon and M. ‘rebeli’ are syntopic. In all, Maculinea caterpillars were found in the nests of seven different ant species (M. alcon was recorded mainly with Myrmica scabrinodis and occasionally with M. salina and M. vandeli; M. ‘rebeli’ used mainly M. scabrinodis, M. sabuleti and M. schencki and occasionally M. lonae and M. specioides). Myrmica scabrinodis was found to be a general host of both M. alcon and M. ‘rebeli’, which is the first record for a common host ant of these two closely related butterflies within the same region. However there were also differences in host ant use patterns between the sites occupied by the two Maculinea taxa, which reflect differences in Myrmica communities between the two types of habitat. Possible explanations for the similar but not identical host use patterns of M. alcon and M. ‘rebeli’, and their relevance for the question of whether they are separate species are discussed.

U2 - 10.1007/s00040-008-1015-4

DO - 10.1007/s00040-008-1015-4

M3 - Journal article

VL - 55

SP - 370

EP - 381

JO - Insectes Sociaux

JF - Insectes Sociaux

SN - 0020-1812

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 9487990