Journal
BIOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 18, Issue 4, Pages -Publisher
ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2021.0518
Keywords
climate change; CTmax; ecophysiology; experimental warming; formicidae; BCI
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This study used a tropical forest soil warming experiment to assess the impact of temperature increase on litter-dwelling ants. The results showed that a two-year increase in temperature can lead to changes in ant community structure and foraging activities.
Climate change is one of the primary agents of the global decline in insect abundance. Because of their narrow thermal ranges, tropical ectotherms are predicted to be most threatened by global warming, yet tests of this prediction are often confounded by other anthropogenic disturbances. We used a tropical forest soil warming experiment to directly test the effect of temperature increase on litter-dwelling ants. Two years of continuous warming led to a change in ant community between warming and control plots. Specifically, six ant genera were recorded only on warming plots, and one genus only on control plots. Wasmannia auropuctata, a species often invasive elsewhere but native to this forest, was more abundant in warmed plots. Ant recruitment at baits was best predicted by soil surface temperature and ant heat tolerance. These results suggest that heat tolerance is useful for predicting changes in daily foraging activity, which is directly tied to colony fitness. We show that a 2-year increase in temperature (of 2-4 degrees C) can have a profound effect on the most abundant insects, potentially favouring species with invasive traits and moderate heat tolerances.
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