Absorption of ant-provided carbon dioxide and nitrogen by a tropical epiphyte
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Tri-party underground symbiosis between a weevil, bacteria and a desert plantA carnivorous plant fed by its ant symbiont: a unique multi-faceted nutritional mutualismA novel type of nutritional ant-plant interaction: ant partners of carnivorous pitcher plants prevent nutrient export by dipteran pitcher infaunaObligate plant farming by a specialized antThe carbon and nitrogen ecophysiologies of two endemic tropical orchids mirrors those of their temperate relatives and the local environmentForbidden phenotypes and the limits of evolution.Nutritional benefits from domatia inhabitants in an ant-plant interaction: interlopers do pay the rentDivergent Adaptive Strategies by Two Co-occurring Epiphytic Orchids to Water Stress: Escape or Avoidance?Potential sources of nitrogen in an ant-garden tank-bromeliadThe evolution of plant-insect mutualisms.A novel resource-service mutualism between bats and pitcher plants.Phylogenetics and molecular clocks reveal the repeated evolution of ant-plants after the late Miocene in Africa and the early Miocene in Australasia and the Neotropics.Ant species identity mediates reproductive traits and allocation in an ant-garden bromeliadSpecies-Specific Effects of Ant Inhabitants on Bromeliad Nutrition.Mixotrophy everywhere on land and in water: the grand écart hypothesis.Exploring fungus-plant N transfer in a tripartite ant-plant-fungus mutualism.The role of multiple partners in a digestive mutualism with a protocarnivorous plant.Mutualistic ants contribute to tank-bromeliad nutrition.Two strategies by epiphytic orchids for maintaining water balance: thick cuticles in leaves and water storage in pseudobulbs.Current issues in the evolutionary ecology of ant-plant symbioses.The effects of ant nests on soil fertility and plant performance: a meta-analysis.Partner abundance controls mutualism stability and the pace of morphological change over geologic time.Characterization of actinobacteria associated with three ant-plant mutualisms.Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) in an epiphytic ant-plant, Myrmecodia beccarii Hook.f. (Rubiaceae).Mutualism as reciprocal exploitation: African plant-ants defend foliar but not reproductive structures.Dietary flexibility aids Asian earthworm invasion in North American forests.The assembly of ant-farmed gardens: mutualism specialization following host broadening.Leaf-cutting ant nests near roads increase fitness of exotic plant species in natural protected areas.Bromeliad-living spiders improve host plant nutrition and growth.Friend or foe? A behavioral and stable isotopic investigation of an ant-plant symbiosis.Plant-ants feed their host plant, but above all a fungal symbiont to recycle nitrogen.Sticky plant captures prey for symbiotic bug: is this digestive mutualism?Do ants feed plants? A 15N labelling study of nitrogen fluxes from ants to plants in the mutualism of Pheidole and PiperThe plant-ant Camponotus schmitzi helps its carnivorous host-plant Nepenthes bicalcarata to catch its preyTrophic mediation by a fungus in an ant-plant mutualismOptimizing Diversity Assessment Protocols for High Canopy Ants in Tropical Rain ForestPublic goods, public services and by-product mutualism in an ant-fern symbiosisCospeciation of ants and plants
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P2860
Absorption of ant-provided carbon dioxide and nitrogen by a tropical epiphyte
description
article publié dans la revue scientifique Nature
@fr
scientific article published in Nature
@en
wetenschappelijk artikel
@nl
наукова стаття, опублікована в Nature в травні 1995
@uk
name
Absorption of ant-provided carbon dioxide and nitrogen by a tropical epiphyte
@en
Absorption of ant-provided carbon dioxide and nitrogen by a tropical epiphyte
@nl
type
label
Absorption of ant-provided carbon dioxide and nitrogen by a tropical epiphyte
@en
Absorption of ant-provided carbon dioxide and nitrogen by a tropical epiphyte
@nl
prefLabel
Absorption of ant-provided carbon dioxide and nitrogen by a tropical epiphyte
@en
Absorption of ant-provided carbon dioxide and nitrogen by a tropical epiphyte
@nl
P356
P1433
P1476
Absorption of ant-provided carbon dioxide and nitrogen by a tropical epiphyte
@en
P2093
Diane W. Davidson
P2888
P304
P356
10.1038/375137A0
P407
P577
1995-05-01T00:00:00Z
P5875
P6179
1053717443