Litcius/Paper detail

The evolution of plant cultivation by ants

Laura Chuhan Campbell, E. Toby Kiers, Guillaume Chomicki

2022Trends in Plant Science15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Outside humans, true agriculture was previously thought to be restricted to social insects farming fungus. However, obligate farming of plants by ants was recently discovered in Fiji, prompting a re-examination of plant cultivation by ants. Here, we generate a database of plant cultivation by ants, identify three main types, and show that these interactions evolved primarily for shelter rather than food. We find that plant cultivation evolved at least 65 times independently for crops (~200 plant species), and 15 times in farmer lineages (~37 ant taxa) in the Neotropics and Asia/Australasia. Because of their high evolutionary replication, and variation in partner dependence, these systems are powerful models to unveil the steps in the evolution and ecology of insect agriculture.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyPlant sciencePlant evolutionPlant biologyBotanyEcologyGeneticsGeneGenomeInsect and Arachnid Ecology and BehaviorPlant and animal studiesInsect and Pesticide Research