Seed dispersal by ants is an important means of migration for plants.
Although many 34 myrmecochorous plants have seeds containing elaiosome,
a nutritional reward for ants, some 35 non-myrmecochorous seeds without
elaiosomes are also dispersed by ant species. However, the 36 mechanism
by which seeds without elaiosomes enable efficient dispersal by ants is
scarcely 37 investigated. The seeds of the achlorophyllous and
myco-heterotrophic herbaceous plant 38 Monotropastrum humile are very
small without elaiosomes and require a fungal host for 39 germination
and survival. We performed a bioassay using seeds of M. humile and the
ant 40 Nylanderia flavipes to demonstrate ant-mediated seed dispersal.
We also analyzed the volatile 41 odors emitted from M. humile seeds and
conducted bioassays using dummy seeds coated with 42 seed volatiles.
Although elaiosomes were absent from the M. humile seeds, the ants
carried the 43 seeds to their nests. They also carried the dummy seeds
coated with the seed volatile mixture to 44 the nest, and left some
dummy seeds inside the nest and discarded the rest of the dummy seeds 45
outside the nest with a bias toward locations with moisture conditions,
which might be 46 conducive to germination. We concluded that seeds of
M. humile were dispersed by the ants, 47 and that seed odors were
sufficient to induce directed dispersal even without elaiosomes. It is
48 probable that the fleshy fruit producing genus Monotropastrum evolved
from the related 49 anemochorous genus Monotropa, which produces capsule
fruit. This transformation from 50 anemochory to myrmecochory presents a
novel evolutionary pathway toward ant-mediated seed 51 dispersal in an
achlorophyllous plant.