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Abstract
Plant–herbivore interactions reciprocally influence species’ evolutionary trajectories. These interactions have led to many physical and chemical defenses across the plant kingdom. Some plants have even evolved indirect defense strategies to outsource their protection to ant bodyguards by bribing them with a sugary reward (nectar). Identifying the evolutionary processes underpinning these indirect defenses provide insight into the evolution of plant-animal interactions. Using a cross-kingdom, phylogenetic approach, we examined the convergent evolution of ant-guarding nectaries across ferns and flowering plants. Here, we discover that nectaries originated in ferns and flowering plants concurrently during the Cretaceous, coinciding with the rise of plant associations in ants. While nectaries in flowering plants evolved steadily through time, ferns showed a pronounced lag of nearly 100 My between their origin and subsequent diversification in the Cenozoic. Importantly, we find that as ferns transitioned from the forest floor into the canopy, they secondarily recruited ant bodyguards from existing ant-angiosperm relationships.
Some plants use nectar to attract ant bodyguards. Here, the authors use a cross-kingdom phylogenetic approach to find that ferns and angiosperms evolved nectaries in the Cretaceous, coinciding with ant evolution, and that ferns recruited ant-bodyguards from existing ant-angiosperm partnerships.
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1 University of Tennessee Knoxville, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Knoxville, USA (GRID:grid.411461.7) (ISNI:0000 0001 2315 1184)
2 Boyce Thompson Institute, Ithaca, USA (GRID:grid.5386.8) (ISNI:000000041936877X); Cornell University, Plant Biology Section, School of Integrative Plant Science, Ithaca, USA (GRID:grid.5386.8) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 877X)
3 Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Cornell University, Ithaca, USA (GRID:grid.5386.8) (ISNI:000000041936877X); Cornell University, Department of Entomology, Ithaca, USA (GRID:grid.5386.8) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 877X)