Extended Data Fig. 9: Each of the five fungal haplotypes cultivated by P. cornetzi was widely distributed across Soberanía National Park. | Nature Ecology & Evolution

Extended Data Fig. 9: Each of the five fungal haplotypes cultivated by P. cornetzi was widely distributed across Soberanía National Park.

From: Nutritional niches reveal fundamental domestication trade-offs in fungus-farming ants

Extended Data Fig. 9: Each of the five fungal haplotypes cultivated by P. cornetzi was widely distributed across Soberanía National Park.

For a map of these sampling locations, see Extended Data Fig. 10, Supplementary Table 14. We combined cultivars from La Seda plots 1 and 2 for this figure since these plots were within 200 m of each other. Four of the five fungal haplotypes that we obtained from these Panama study plots matched cultivar haplotypes sampled from Brazilian colonies of Paratrachymyrmex and Sericomyrmex by Solomon et al.35, suggesting broad geographic distributions extending across Central and South America. Additional Soberanía Park sampling localities where no specific plots were assigned (so no labels in Extended Data Fig. 10) included La Laguna (N 9.1196, W −79.6942), Horse Patch (N 9.11990, W −79.70730), and Barro Colorado Island (BCI: N 9.15744, W −79.83523).

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