English

Facultative predation can alter the ant-aphid population

Populations and Evolution 2020-04-07 v1

Abstract

Although ant--aphid interactions are the most typical example of mutualism between insect species, some studies suggest that ant attendance is not always advantageous for the aphids because they may pay a physiological cost. In this study, we propose a new mathematical model of an ant--aphid system considering the costs of ant attendance. It includes both mutualism and predation. In the model, we incorporate not only the trade-off between the intrinsic growth rate of aphids and the honeydew reward for ants, but also the facultative predation of aphids by ants. The analysis and computer simulations of the two-dimensional nonlinear dynamical system with functional response produces fixed points and also novel and complex bifurcations. These results suggest that a higher degree of dependence of the aphids on the ants does not always enhance the abundance of the aphids. In contrast, the model without facultative predation gives a simple prediction, that is, the higher the degree of dependence, the more abundant the aphids are. The present study predicts two overall scenarios for an ant--aphid system with mutualism and facultative predation: (1) aphids with a lower intrinsic growth rate and many attending ants and (2) aphids with a higher intrinsic growth rate and fewer attending ants. This seems to explain why there are two lineages of aphids: one is associated with ants and the other is not.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2004.01966,
  title  = {Facultative predation can alter the ant-aphid population},
  author = {Atsuki Nakai and Yoko Inui and Kei Tokita},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2004.01966},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

28 pages, 6 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-23T14:39:20.807Z