4.4 Article

High Dietary Niche Overlap Between Non-native and Native Ant Species in Natural Ecosystems

期刊

ENVIRONMENTAL ENTOMOLOGY
卷 50, 期 1, 页码 86-96

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/ee/nvaa133

关键词

stable isotope; isotopic niche; metabarcoding; gut content analysis; environmental DNA

资金

  1. Ministry for Primary Industries and University of Auckland Partnership Postgraduate Scholarship
  2. Todd Foundation
  3. University of Auckland
  4. Manaaki Whenua - Landcare Research
  5. Centre for Biodiversity and Biosecurity
  6. Kate Edger Educational Charitable Trust
  7. NIWA

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Ants are a highly diverse and ecologically important group of insects found in almost all terrestrial ecosystems. Some non-native ant species have been widely transported around the globe and invade many natural ecosystems, often out-competing native counterparts. Through stable isotope analysis and metabarcoding techniques, researchers discovered high dietary overlap among ant species in New Zealand, with most feeding mainly across two trophic levels. Negative co-occurrence patterns between dominant non-native and ubiquitous native ant species suggests negative impacts on native ecosystems.
Ants represent a highly diverse and ecologically important group of insects found in almost all terrestrial ecosystems. A subset of ant species have been widely transported around the globe and invade many natural ecosystems, often out-competing native counterparts and causing varying impacts on recipient ecosystems. Decisions to control non-native ant populations require an understanding of their interactions and related impacts on native communities. We employed stable isotope analysis and metabarcoding techniques to identify potential dietary niche overlap and identify gut contents of 10 ant species found in natural ecosystems in Aotearoa New Zealand. Additionally, we looked at co-occurrence to identify potential competitive interactions among native and non-native ant species. Ants fed mainly across two trophic levels, with high dietary overlap. Relative to other ant species sampled, two non-native ant species, Linepithema humile and Technomyrmex jocosus, were found to feed at the lowest trophic level. The largest isotopic niche overlap was observed between the native Monomorium antarcticum and the invasive Ochetellus glaber, with analyses revealing a negative co-occurrence pattern. Sequence data of ant gut content identified 51 molecular operational taxonomic units, representing 22 orders and 34 families, and primarily consisting of arthropod DNA. Although we generally found high dietary overlap among species, negative occurrence between a dominant, non-native species and a ubiquitous native species indicates that species-specific interactions could be negatively impacting native ecosystems. Our research progresses and informs the currently limited knowledge around establishing protocols for metabarcoding to investigate ant diet and interactions between native and non-native ant species.

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