15 research outputs found
Exploring the relationship between macrofungi diversity, abundance, and vascular plant diversity in semi-naturaland managed forests in north-east Hungary
A theoretical foundation for multi-scale regular vegetation patterns
Self-organized regular vegetation patterns are widespread and thought to mediate ecosystem functions such as productivity and robustness, but the mechanisms underlying their origin and maintenance remain disputed. Particularly controversial are landscapes of overdispersed (evenly spaced) elements, such as North American Mima mounds, Brazilian murundus, South African heuweltjies, and, famously, Namibian fairy circles. Two competing hypotheses are currently debated. On the one hand, models of scale-dependent feedbacks, whereby plants facilitate neighbours while competing with distant individuals, can reproduce various regular patterns identified in satellite imagery. Owing to deep theoretical roots and apparent generality, scale-dependent feedbacks are widely viewed as a unifying and near-universal principle of regular-pattern formation despite scant empirical evidence. On the other hand, many overdispersed vegetation patterns worldwide have been attributed to subterranean ecosystem engineers such as termites, ants, and rodents. Although potentially consistent with territorial competition, this interpretation has been challenged theoretically and empirically and (unlike scale-dependent feedbacks) lacks a unifying dynamical theory, fuelling scepticism about its plausibility and generality. Here we provide a general theoretical foundation for self-organization of social-insect colonies, validated using data from four continents, which demonstrates that intraspecific competition between territorial animals can generate the large-scale hexagonal regularity of these patterns. However, this mechanism is not mutually exclusive with scale-dependent feedbacks. Using Namib Desert fairy circles as a case study, we present field data showing that these landscapes exhibit multi-scale patterning-previously undocumented in this system-that cannot be explained by either mechanism in isolation. These multi-scale patterns and other emergent properties, such as enhanced resistance to and recovery from drought, instead arise from dynamic interactions in our theoretical framework, which couples both mechanisms. The potentially global extent of animal-induced regularity in vegetation-which can modulate other patterning processes in functionally important ways-emphasizes the need to integrate multiple mechanisms of ecological self-organization
Reclaiming Lost Territory: the Response of Owyhee Harvester Ants to Forager Intrusions by Neighboring Colonies
Disruption of Ant-Aphid Mutualism in Canopy Enhances the Abundance of Beetles on the Forest Floor
Ant-aphid mutualism is known to play a key role in the structure of the arthropod community in the tree canopy, but its possible ecological effects for the forest floor are unknown. We hypothesized that aphids in the canopy can increase the abundance of ants on the forest floor, thus intensifying the impacts of ants on other arthropods on the forest floor. We tested this hypothesis in a deciduous temperate forest in Beijing, China. We excluded the aphid-tending ants Lasius fuliginosus from the canopy using plots of varying sizes, and monitored the change in the abundance of ants and other arthropods on the forest floor in the treated and control plots. We also surveyed the abundance of ants and other arthropods on the forest floor to explore the relationships between ants and other arthropods in the field. Through a three-year experimental study, we found that the exclusion of ants from the canopy significantly decreased the abundance of ants on the forest floor, but increased the abundance of beetles, although the effect was only significant in the large ant-exclusion plot (80*60 m). The field survey showed that the abundance of both beetles and spiders was negatively related to the abundance of ants. These results suggest that aphids located in the tree canopy have indirect negative effects on beetles by enhancing the ant abundance on the forest floor. Considering that most of the beetles in our study are important predators, the ant-aphid mutualism can have further trophic cascading effects on the forest floor food web
Use of Cross-Taxon Congruence for Hotspot Identification at a Regional Scale
One of the most debated problems in conservation biology is the use of indicator (surrogate) taxa to predict spatial patterns in other taxa. Cross-taxon congruence in species richness patterns is of paramount importance at regional scales to disclose areas of high conservation value that are significant in a broader biogeographical context but yet placed in the finer, more practical, political context of decision making. We analysed spatial patterns of diversity in six arthropod taxa from the Turkish fauna as a regional case study relevant to global conservation of the Mediterranean basin. Although we found high congruence in cross-taxon comparisons of species richness (0.241<r<0.645), hotspots of different groups show limited overlap, generally less than 50 per cent. The ability of a given taxon to capture diversity of other taxa was usually modest (on average, 50 percent of diversity of non-target taxa), limiting the use of hotspots for effective conservation of non-target groups. Nevertheless, our study demonstrates that a given group may partially stand in for another with similar ecological needs and biogeographical histories. We therefore advocate the use of multiple sets of taxa, chosen so as to be representative of animals with different ecological needs and biogeographical histories
Workers’ Extra-Nest Behavioral Changes During Colony Fission in Dinoponera quadriceps (Santschi)
Ant colonies can reproduce by two strategies: independent foundation,
wherein the queen starts a new colony alone, and dependent foundation,
in which workers assist the queen. In the queenless species Dinoponera
quadriceps (Santschi), the colony reproduces obligatorily by fission, a type
of dependent foundation, but this process is not well understood. This
study describes a colony fission event of D. quadriceps in the field and
analyzes the influence of the fission process on workers’ extra-nest behavior.
Based on observations of workers outside the nest, five distinct
stages were identified: monodomic stage, polydomic stage, split stage,
conflict stage, and post-conflict stage. The colony was initially monodomic
and then occupied a second nest before it split into two independent
colonies, indicating a gradual and opportunistic dependent foundation.
After the fission event, the daughter colony had aggressive conflicts with
the parental colony, resulting in the latter’s disappearance. Colony fission
affected workers’ extra-nest behavior by increasing the frequency of
rubbing the gaster against the substrate (which probably has a chemical
marking function) and by decreasing the frequency of foraging during the
split stage. After the fission event, the number of foragers was halved and
foragers remained nearer to the nest during extra-nest activity. The spatial
closeness of the parental and daughter colonies led to competition that
caused the extinction or migration of the parental colony. Intraspecific
competition was indicated by foraging directionality at the colony level,
whereby areas of neighbor colonies were avoided; this directionality was
stronger while both colonies coexiste
