The fluids of pitcher plants are habitats to many specialized animals known as inquilines, which facilitate the conversion of prey protein into pitcher-absorbable nitrogen forms such as ammonium. (Diptera: Mycetophilidae) is a predatory dipteran inquiline that inhabits the pitchers of Larvae of construct sticky webs over the fluid surface of to ensnare emerging adult dipteran inquilines. However, the interaction between and its host has never been examined before, and it is not known if can contribute to nutrient sequestration in individuals were reared in artificial pitchers in the laboratory on a diet of emergent mosquitoes, and the ammonium concentration of the pitcher fluids was measured over time. Fluid ammonium concentration in tubes containing was significantly greater than those of the controls. Furthermore, fluid ammonium concentrations increased greatly after larvae metamorphosed, although the cause of this increase could not be identified. Our results show that a terrestrial, inquiline predator can contribute significantly to nutrient sequestration in the phytotelma it inhabits, and suggest that this interaction has a net mutualistic outcome for both species.
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