4.0 Article

Winged ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) presence in twigs on the leaf litter of Atlantic Forest

Journal

BIOTA NEOTROPICA
Volume 19, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

REVISTA BIOTA NEOTROPICA
DOI: 10.1590/1676-0611-BN-2018-0694

Keywords

Dead wood; mating; satellite nest; inhabitant of leaf litter; arboreal habitat

Funding

  1. FAPESP [2013/16861-5]
  2. SIS Bio [45492]
  3. Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior (CAPES)
  4. FAEP/UMC

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In the leaf litter, ants have various nesting resources available, such as live or dead trunks, twigs, leaves, fruits and seeds. On the twigs, there are adults and immature individuals, but also the queen and winged. The production of wings requires time and energy from the colony. The objective of this study was to investigate the presence of winged in ant colonies in twigs on the leaf litter. Our prediction is that the richness and abundance of winged in twigs are the greatest in rainy months. We collected all twigs with ants in 552 plots with 16 m(2), totaling 8,832 m(2) of leaf litter, in areas located in the Brazilian Atlantic Domain. We compared the species richness and the number of colonies with and without winged, as well as the number of winged over a year. In total, we collected 1,521 twigs with colonies belonging to 92 species of ants. The rate of twigs with winged was low, about 12%. In colonies with winged, the total number of twigs, species and amount of winged does not differ between the months considered dry and rainy. The majority of winged species are leaf litter dwellers, such as Linepithema neotropicum, recorded with the highest amount of winged irrespective of the period. Arboreal species colonized 15% of the twigs and, in 1/3 of these species, winged were recorded as part of the composition of the colony. Although winged represent a small percentage of the colony in twigs, our results indicate that this feature is important for the life cycle of 44% of the species that occupy twigs, considering that winged are fundamental for the dispersion of the colony.

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