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<paperproposal id="149">
  <title>Tree diversity and nectar composition affect arthropod visitors on extrafloral nectaries in a diversity experiment</title>
  <rationale>Aims
Plants  with  extrafloral  nectaries  (EFNs)  are  common  in  tropical and subtropical habitats and, despite many other arthropods also forage for EFN, most studies solely focused on the defense mutualisms between EFN plants and ants. This study aims at a quantitative assessment of the entire arthropod community that visits EFN trees to compare visitor communities between different tree species to disentangle the mechanisms that may drive EFN visitor community composition. We also test for tree diversity effects on EFN visitors, as it is unknown if local tree species richness relates to the abundance and species richness of arthropods foraging for EFN.

Methods
We  sampled  EFN-visiting  arthropods  in  the  experimental  tree species richness gradient of the BEF-China Experiment, the currently largest forest diversity experiment in the world, and tested 
if tree species richness affects EFN visitors and if visitor community composition differs between EFN tree species. In a second step,  we  analyzed  the  EFN  of  Ailanthus  altissima  and  Triadica 
cochinchinensis,  the  two  EFN  tree  species  with  highest  visitor abundance, for sugars and amino acids (AA) to test if tree species-specific differences in nectar chemistry translate to differing visitor communities. Lastly, we conducted a choice experiment using different artificial nectar solutions to test if nectar quality affects foraging decisions of ants, the most frequent EFN visitors in our study sites.

Important findings
EFN trees in young successional forests in subtropical South-East China are visited by a diverse assemblage of arthropods including ants,  beetles,  flies,  and  spiders. Albeit  ants  accounted  for  about 75%  of  all  individuals,  non-ant  visitors  were  by  far  more  species  rich. Visitor  abundance  and  species  richness  declined  with increasing  tree  species  richness,  suggesting  a  resource  dilution effect, because plots with more tree species had proportionally less EFN tree individuals and thus lower nectar availability. Ailanthus altissima  and  T.  cochinchinensis  were  visited  by  different  arthropods  and  their  nectar  had  species-specific  AA  composition  and sugar concentration, indicating that differences in visitors may, at least partly, be explained by differences in nectar chemistry. These findings are supported by the choice experiment, in which artificial nectars containing sugar solutions supplemented with essential AAs attracted more ants than pure sugar solutions or sugar solutions  supplemented  with  non-essential AAs.  Our  results  improve the  understanding  of  the  complex  ecology  of  EFN  trees,  a  plant life form that might be crucial for understanding how tree diversity influences patterns of tree growth in young successional tropical and subtropical forests.</rationale>
  <createdAt>2015-02-11 12:55:05 UTC</createdAt>
  <status>final</status>
  <project id="12">SP09e Aboveground multi-trophic plant-insect interactions in a  Chinese subtropical forest</project>
  <proposer>
    <person id="91">
      <name>Michael Staab</name>
      <email>michael.staab@nature.uni-freiburg.de</email>
    </person>
  </proposer>
  <proponents>
    <person id="24">
      <name>Nico Blüthgen</name>
      <email>bluethgen@bio.tu-darmstadt.de</email>
    </person>
    <person id="23">
      <name>Alexandra-Maria Klein</name>
      <email>alexandra.klein@nature.uni-freiburg.de</email>
    </person>
    <person id="97">
      <name>Jan Peters</name>
      <email>petersjan79@googlemail.com</email>
    </person>
    <person id="112">
      <name>Joel Methorst</name>
      <email>joel.methorst@stud.leuphana.de</email>
    </person>
  </proponents>
  <datasets>
  </datasets>
  <envisaged>
    <journal>Journal of Plant Ecology</journal>
    <date>2016-03-01</date>
    <state>accepted</state>
  </envisaged>
</paperproposal>
