Gove Aaron D, Majer Jonathan D, Dunn Robert R
Centre for Ecosystem Diversity and Dynamics, Department of Environmental Biology, Curtin University of Technology, Perth, WA, Australia.
Oecologia. 2007 Sep;153(3):687-97. doi: 10.1007/s00442-007-0756-5. Epub 2007 May 30.
In order to understand the dynamics of co-evolution it is important to consider spatial variation in interaction dynamics. We examined the relative importance of ant activity, diversity and species identity in an ant seed dispersal mutualism at local, regional and continental scales. We also studied the determinants of seed dispersal rates and dispersal distances at eight sites in the Eneabba sandplain (29.63 S, 115.22 E), western Australia to understand local variation in seed dispersal rate and distance. To test the generality of the conclusions derived from the eight local sites, we established 16 sites along a 1650-km transect in western Australia, covering 11 degrees of latitude and a six-fold increase in rainfall, at which we sampled the ant assemblage, estimated ant species richness and ant activity and observed the removal rate of myrmecochorous seeds. We also assessed the importance of ant species identity at a continental scale via a review of studies carried out throughout Australia which examined ant seed dispersal. Among the eight sandplain shrubland sites, ant species identity, in particular the presence of one genus, Rhytidoponera, was associated with the most dispersal and above average dispersal distances. At the landscape scale, Rhytidoponera presence was the most important determinant of seed removal rate, while seed removal rate was negatively correlated with ant species richness and latitude. Most ant seed removal studies carried out throughout Australia reinforce our observations that Rhytidoponera species were particularly important seed dispersers. It is suggested that superficially diffuse mutualisms may depend greatly on the identity of particular partners. Even at large biogeographic scales, temporal and spatial variation in what are considered to be diffuse mutualisms may often be linked to variation in the abundance of particular partners, and be only weakly - or negatively - associated with the diversity of partners.
为了理解协同进化的动态过程,考虑相互作用动态中的空间变化很重要。我们在局部、区域和大陆尺度上研究了蚂蚁活动、多样性和物种身份在蚂蚁种子传播互利共生关系中的相对重要性。我们还研究了西澳大利亚埃纳巴沙原(南纬29.63度,东经115.22度)八个地点种子传播速率和传播距离的决定因素,以了解种子传播速率和距离的局部变化。为了检验从这八个局部地点得出的结论的普遍性,我们在西澳大利亚沿着一条1650公里的样带建立了16个地点,覆盖11个纬度且降雨量增加了六倍,在这些地点我们对蚂蚁群落进行了采样,估计了蚂蚁物种丰富度和蚂蚁活动,并观察了蚁播种子的清除率。我们还通过综述澳大利亚各地进行的关于蚂蚁种子传播的研究,评估了大陆尺度上蚂蚁物种身份的重要性。在这八个沙原灌丛地点中,蚂蚁物种身份,特别是一个属,即凹头蚁属的存在,与最多的传播和高于平均水平的传播距离相关。在景观尺度上,凹头蚁属的存在是种子清除率的最重要决定因素,而种子清除率与蚂蚁物种丰富度和纬度呈负相关。澳大利亚各地进行的大多数蚂蚁种子清除研究都证实了我们的观察结果,即凹头蚁属物种是特别重要的种子传播者。有人提出,表面上分散的互利共生关系可能在很大程度上取决于特定伙伴的身份。即使在大的生物地理尺度上,被认为是分散互利共生关系的时间和空间变化通常可能与特定伙伴丰度的变化有关,并且与伙伴的多样性仅有微弱的——或负的——关联。