@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref18574,
author = {Veronika Mayer and Hermann Voglmayr},
title = {Mycelial carton galleries of Azteca brevis (Formicidae) as a multispecies network},
year = {2009},
keywords = {published},
doi = {10.1098/rspb.2009.0768},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Proceedings of the Royal Society B},
volume = {276},
number = {},
pages = {3265--3273},
abstract = {Apart from growing fungi for nutrition, as seen in the NewWorld Attini, ants cultivate fungi for reinforcement of the walls of their nests or tunnel-shaped runway galleries. These fungi are grown on organic material such as bark, epiphylls or trichomes, and form stable carton structures . In this study, the carton of the runway galleries built by Azteca brevis (Formicidae, Dolichoderinae) on branches of Tetrathylacium macrophyllum (Flacourtiaceae) is investigated. For the first time, molecular tools are used to address the biodiversity and phylogenetic affinities of fungi involved in tropical ant carton architecture, a previously neglected ant fungus mutualism. The A. brevis carton involves a complex association of several fungi. All the isolated fungi were unequivocally placed within the Chaetothyriales by DNA sequence data. Whereas five types of fungal hyphae were morphologically distinguishable, our DNA data showed that more species are involved, applying a phylogenetic species concept based on DNA phylogenies and hyphal morphology. In contrast to the New World Attini with their many-to-one (different ant species one fungal cultivar) pattern, and temperate Lasius with a one-to-two (one ant species two mutualists) or many-to-one (different ant species share the same mutualist) system, the A. brevis fungi association is a one-to-many multi-species network. Vertical fungus transmission has not yet been found, indicating that the A. brevis fungi interaction is rather generalized.}
}
Citation for Study 10083
Citation title:
"Mycelial carton galleries of Azteca brevis (Formicidae) as a multispecies network".
This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S2423
(Status: Published).
Citation
Mayer V., & Voglmayr H. 2009. Mycelial carton galleries of Azteca brevis (Formicidae) as a multispecies network. Proceedings of the Royal Society B, 276: 3265-3273.
Authors
Abstract
Apart from growing fungi for nutrition, as seen in the NewWorld Attini, ants cultivate fungi for reinforcement of the walls of their nests or tunnel-shaped runway galleries. These fungi are grown on organic material such as bark, epiphylls or trichomes, and form stable carton structures . In this study, the carton of the runway galleries built by Azteca brevis (Formicidae, Dolichoderinae) on branches of Tetrathylacium macrophyllum (Flacourtiaceae) is investigated. For the first time, molecular tools are used to address the biodiversity and phylogenetic affinities of fungi involved in tropical ant carton architecture, a previously neglected ant fungus mutualism. The A. brevis carton involves a complex association of several fungi. All the isolated fungi were unequivocally placed within the Chaetothyriales by DNA sequence data. Whereas five types of fungal hyphae were morphologically distinguishable, our DNA data showed that more species are involved, applying a phylogenetic species concept based on DNA phylogenies and hyphal morphology. In contrast to the New World Attini with their many-to-one (different ant species one fungal cultivar) pattern, and temperate Lasius with a one-to-two (one ant species two mutualists) or many-to-one (different ant species share the same mutualist) system, the A. brevis fungi association is a one-to-many multi-species network. Vertical fungus transmission has not yet been found, indicating that the A. brevis fungi interaction is rather generalized.
Keywords
published
External links
About this resource
- Canonical resource URI:
http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S10083
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- Show BibTeX reference
@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref18574,
author = {Veronika Mayer and Hermann Voglmayr},
title = {Mycelial carton galleries of Azteca brevis (Formicidae) as a multispecies network},
year = {2009},
keywords = {published},
doi = {10.1098/rspb.2009.0768},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Proceedings of the Royal Society B},
volume = {276},
number = {},
pages = {3265--3273},
abstract = {Apart from growing fungi for nutrition, as seen in the NewWorld Attini, ants cultivate fungi for reinforcement of the walls of their nests or tunnel-shaped runway galleries. These fungi are grown on organic material such as bark, epiphylls or trichomes, and form stable carton structures . In this study, the carton of the runway galleries built by Azteca brevis (Formicidae, Dolichoderinae) on branches of Tetrathylacium macrophyllum (Flacourtiaceae) is investigated. For the first time, molecular tools are used to address the biodiversity and phylogenetic affinities of fungi involved in tropical ant carton architecture, a previously neglected ant fungus mutualism. The A. brevis carton involves a complex association of several fungi. All the isolated fungi were unequivocally placed within the Chaetothyriales by DNA sequence data. Whereas five types of fungal hyphae were morphologically distinguishable, our DNA data showed that more species are involved, applying a phylogenetic species concept based on DNA phylogenies and hyphal morphology. In contrast to the New World Attini with their many-to-one (different ant species one fungal cultivar) pattern, and temperate Lasius with a one-to-two (one ant species two mutualists) or many-to-one (different ant species share the same mutualist) system, the A. brevis fungi association is a one-to-many multi-species network. Vertical fungus transmission has not yet been found, indicating that the A. brevis fungi interaction is rather generalized.}
}
- Show RIS reference
TY - JOUR
ID - 18574
AU - Mayer,Veronika
AU - Voglmayr,Hermann
T1 - Mycelial carton galleries of Azteca brevis (Formicidae) as a multispecies network
PY - 2009
KW - published
UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2009.0768
N2 - Apart from growing fungi for nutrition, as seen in the NewWorld Attini, ants cultivate fungi for reinforcement of the walls of their nests or tunnel-shaped runway galleries. These fungi are grown on organic material such as bark, epiphylls or trichomes, and form stable carton structures . In this study, the carton of the runway galleries built by Azteca brevis (Formicidae, Dolichoderinae) on branches of Tetrathylacium macrophyllum (Flacourtiaceae) is investigated. For the first time, molecular tools are used to address the biodiversity and phylogenetic affinities of fungi involved in tropical ant carton architecture, a previously neglected ant fungus mutualism. The A. brevis carton involves a complex association of several fungi. All the isolated fungi were unequivocally placed within the Chaetothyriales by DNA sequence data. Whereas five types of fungal hyphae were morphologically distinguishable, our DNA data showed that more species are involved, applying a phylogenetic species concept based on DNA phylogenies and hyphal morphology. In contrast to the New World Attini with their many-to-one (different ant species one fungal cultivar) pattern, and temperate Lasius with a one-to-two (one ant species two mutualists) or many-to-one (different ant species share the same mutualist) system, the A. brevis fungi association is a one-to-many multi-species network. Vertical fungus transmission has not yet been found, indicating that the A. brevis fungi interaction is rather generalized.
L3 - 10.1098/rspb.2009.0768
JF - Proceedings of the Royal Society B
VL - 276
IS -
SP - 3265
EP - 3273
ER -