Knaden Markus, Wehner Rüdiger
Institute of Zoology, University of Zürich, Winterthurerstrasse 190, CH-8057 Zürich, Switzerland.
Front Zool. 2006 Dec 15;3:21. doi: 10.1186/1742-9994-3-21.
The two sympatric species of Tunisian desert ants, Cataglyphis bicolor and C. mauritanica, do not exhibit any differences in their foraging ecology, e.g. in food preferences and in their spatial and temporal activity patterns. Here we show that instead the two species markedly differ in their life histories.
We analysed mtDNA of specimens that were collected along a 250-km transect. C. bicolor exhibited a genetically unstructured population (with the genetic and geographic distances among colonies not being correlated). On the contrary the populations of the polygynous C. mauritanica were clearly structured, i.e. exhibited a strong correlation between genetic and geographic distances. This difference is in accordance with large queen dispersal distances due to far-reaching mating flights in C. bicolor and small queen dispersal distances due to colony foundation by budding in C. mauritanica. Furthermore, wherever we found populations of both species to coexist within the same habitat, the habitat was used agriculturally. Mapping nest positions over periods of several years showed that plowing dramatically decreased the nest densities of either species.
We conclude that owing to its greater queen dispersal potential C. bicolor might be more successful in quickly re-colonizing disturbed areas, while the slowly dispersing C. mauritanica could later out-compete C. bicolor by adopting its effective nest-budding strategy. According to this scenario the observed sympatry of the two species might be an intermediate stage in which faster colonization by one species and more powerful exploitation of space by the other species have somehow balanced each other out. In conclusion, C. bicolor and C. mauritanica represent an example where environmental disturbances in combination with different life histories might beget sympatry in congeneric species with overlapping niches.
突尼斯沙漠蚂蚁的两个同域物种,双色猫蚁(Cataglyphis bicolor)和毛里塔尼亚猫蚁(C. mauritanica),在觅食生态方面没有任何差异,例如在食物偏好以及空间和时间活动模式上。在此我们表明,相反,这两个物种在生活史方面存在显著差异。
我们分析了沿着一条250公里长的样带采集的标本的线粒体DNA。双色猫蚁表现出一个基因无结构的种群(各蚁群之间的遗传距离和地理距离不相关)。相反,多雌型的毛里塔尼亚猫蚁种群结构明显,即遗传距离和地理距离之间呈现出很强的相关性。这种差异与双色猫蚁因远距离婚飞导致的蚁后扩散距离大以及毛里塔尼亚猫蚁因通过分芽建立蚁群导致的蚁后扩散距离小相一致。此外,无论我们在何处发现这两个物种的种群在同一栖息地共存,该栖息地都被用于农业生产。对数年期间蚁巢位置的绘图显示,耕作显著降低了任一物种的蚁巢密度。
我们得出结论,由于双色猫蚁具有更大的蚁后扩散潜力,它可能在快速重新定殖受干扰区域方面更成功,而扩散缓慢的毛里塔尼亚猫蚁随后可能通过采用其有效的蚁巢分芽策略胜过双色猫蚁。根据这种情况,观察到的这两个物种的同域分布可能是一个中间阶段,在此阶段中一个物种的更快定殖和另一个物种对空间的更有效利用在某种程度上相互平衡。总之,双色猫蚁和毛里塔尼亚猫蚁代表了一个例子,即环境干扰与不同的生活史可能导致生态位重叠的同属物种出现同域分布情况。