Summary
1.  Mutualistic interactions are characterized by conditional outcomes that  depend on both the biotic and the abiotic context. However, limited  information is available on the factors that affect the strength of  ant–plant interactions among sympatric congeneric species.
2.  We compared the benefits gained from attracting ants via extrafloral  nectaries – i.e. lowered herbivory and increased seed set – of three  co-occurring varieties in the Chamaecrista desvauxii complex  (Leguminosae) in a cerrado area in Uberlândia, Brazil. Using  whole-individual exclusion experiments, we tested the hypotheses (i)  that the relative strength of those benefits is higher in the variety  with the largest extrafloral nectaries and (ii) that those benefits are  conditional on the presence of predispersal seed predators.
3. Extrafloral nectaries are larger, produce more nectar and attract more ants in var. brevipes than in the other two varieties included in the study. Var. modesta has intermediate-sized nectaries, while a third, undescribed variety has small nectaries, and both attract relatively few ants.
4. For var. brevipes,  extrafloral nectary (EFN) removal significantly increased folivory and  attack on fruits by sucking insects, decreasing the relative number of  flowers, fruits and seeds produced per individual. For the other two  varieties, in contrast, ant effects were reduced, and ants did not  significantly improve reproductive success. In addition, effects of EFN  removal were less pronounced or absent when seed predators were excluded  from fruits of var. brevipes.
5. Synthesis. We showed experimentally that benefits from interactions of three co-occurring varieties of Chamaecrista desvauxii  with ants are context-dependent both within and among taxa. Variation  in the strength of mutualisms among sympatric taxa may potentially  reinforce ecological reproductive isolation and contribute to  diversification in this group.
Journal of Ecology
Volume 100,  Issue 1, pages 242–252, January 2012 

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