4.7 Article

Pervasive and persistent effects of ant invasion and fragmentation on native ant assemblages

期刊

ECOLOGY
卷 102, 期 3, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecy.3257

关键词

ant abundance; Argentine ant; biological invasions; ecological impacts; habitat loss and fragmentation; Linepithema humile; long-term dynamics; native communities; southern California

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资金

  1. Graduate College at the University of Illinois
  2. University of California Natural Reserve System
  3. National Science Foundation Long-term Research in Environmental Biology [1654525]
  4. Division Of Environmental Biology
  5. Direct For Biological Sciences [1654525] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The study found that the invasion of Argentine ants has had long-term negative effects on native ant diversity and abundance. Over the past 21 years, the area occupied and relative abundance of Argentine ants have continued to increase, penetrating into native habitats and reducing refugia for native ants by eliminating sufficient interior area. Behaviorally and numerically dominant invasive species can suppress native diversity for extended periods, as evidenced by the results of the research.
Biological invasions are a leading cause of global change, yet their long-term effects remain hard to predict. Invasive species can remain abundant for long periods of time, or exhibit population crashes that allow native communities to recover. The abundance and impact of nonnative species may also be closely tied to temporally variable habitat characteristics. We investigated the long-term effects of habitat fragmentation and invasion by the Argentine ant (Linepithema humile) by resurveying ants in 40 scrub habitat fragments in coastal southern California that were originally sampled 21 yr ago. At a landscape scale, fragment area, but not fragment age or Argentine ant mean abundance, continued to explain variation in native ant species richness; the species-area relationship between the two sample years did not differ in terms of slope or intercept. At local scales, over the last 21 yr we detected increases in the overall area invaded (+36.7%, estimated as the proportion of occupied traps) and the relative abundance of the Argentine ant (+121.95%, estimated as mean number of workers in pitfall traps). Argentine ant mean abundance also increased inward from urban edges in 2017 compared to 1996. The greater level of penetration into fragments likely reduced native ant richness by eliminating refugia for native ants in fragments that did not contain sufficient interior area. At one fragment where we sampled eight times over the last 21 yr, Argentine ant mean abundance increased over time while the diversity of native ground-foraging ants declined from 14 to 4 species. Notably, native species predicted to be particularly sensitive to the combined effect of invasion and habitat loss were not detected at any sites in our recent sampling, including the army ant genus Neivamyrmex. Conversely, two introduced ant species (Brachymyrmex patagonicus and Pheidole flavens) that were undetected in 1996 are now common and widespread at our sites. Our results indicate that behaviorally and numerically dominant invasive species can maintain high densities and suppress native diversity for extended periods.

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