4.4 Article

Rapid assessment of the three-dimensional distribution of dominant arboreal ants in tropical forests

期刊

INSECT CONSERVATION AND DIVERSITY
卷 14, 期 4, 页码 426-438

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/icad.12486

关键词

Ant mosaics; canopy; competition; C‐ scores; dominant arboreal ants; null models; Papua New Guinea; primary forests; stratification; territoriality

资金

  1. Belgian Fund for Scientific Research
  2. Czech Academy of Sciences [FNRS-17-04]
  3. Czech Science Foundation [21-00828S]
  4. European Research Council [669609]
  5. Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation
  6. Stavros Niarchos Foundation
  7. Total Foundation
  8. Fondation d'entreprise EDF
  9. French public 'Fonds Pacifique'
  10. New Caledonia Government
  11. Reef Foundation
  12. F.R.S.-FNRS (Belgium)
  13. Belgian National Lottery
  14. Spiecapag
  15. Entrepose Contracting

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Ants, especially territorially dominant arboreal ants, are ecologically important in tropical forests, but are rarely used in conservation monitoring due to difficulties in collection. A standardized baitline protocol and a procedure to objectively define species dominance have been developed to study and monitor the distribution and behavior of arboreal ants, providing a potential tool for understanding and detecting ant mosaics efficiently.
Ants are omnipresent in tropical forests, especially territorially dominant arboreal ants whose territories are spatially segregated forming 'ant mosaics'. These ecologically important species are rarely used in conservation monitoring because of the difficulty in collecting them. We developed a standardised baitline protocol to study the distribution of dominant ants on canopy trees and also a procedure to objectively define species dominance, even in unknown ant assemblages. Besides eliminating the need to climb trees, this protocol allows live arboreal ant specimens to be sampled at different heights. Behavioural aggressiveness assays between the collected workers provide data on the three-dimensional distribution of colonies and on interactions between species. We compared the results of the behavioural tests to those from null models. In the New Guinean lowland forest studied, we show that the canopy was either shared by multiple territorial species or inhabited by a single species with a large territory. The baitline protocol collected up to half of the arboreal ant species found in a felling census. However, the proportion of species collected at baits decreased with the increasing spatial dominance of single territorial species. Behavioural observations used in the protocol allowed a more efficient detection of ant mosaics than null models. Territorially dominant ants were active on both understorey and canopy trees. The protocol is fast and easy to replicate. It is a potential tool for understanding and monitoring the spatiotemporal dynamics of arboreal ant assemblages and can detect populous colonies, including those of invasive species.

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