Department of Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2012;7(2):e30914. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0030914. Epub 2012 Feb 14.
Facilitation, when one species enhances the environment or performance of another species, can be highly localized in space. While facilitation in plant communities has been intensely studied, the role of facilitation in shaping animal communities is less well understood. In the Chihuahuan Desert, both kangaroo rats and harvester ants depend on the abundant seeds of annual plants. Kangaroo rats, however, are hypothesized to facilitate harvester ants through soil disturbance and selective seed predation rather than competing with them. I used a spatially explicit approach to examine whether a positive or negative interaction exists between banner-tailed kangaroo rat (Dipodomys spectabilis) mounds and rough harvester ant (Pogonomyrmex rugosus) colonies. The presence of a scale-dependent interaction between mounds and colonies was tested by comparing fitted spatial point process models with and without interspecific effects. Also, the effect of proximity to a mound on colony mortality and spatial patterns of surviving colonies was examined. The spatial pattern of kangaroo rat mounds and harvester ant colonies was consistent with a positive interspecific interaction at small scales (<10 m). Mortality risk of vulnerable, recently founded harvester ant colonies was lower when located close to a kangaroo rat mound and proximity to a mound partly predicted the spatial pattern of surviving colonies. My findings support localized facilitation of harvester ants by kangaroo rats, likely mediated through ecosystem engineering and foraging effects on plant cover and composition. The scale-dependent effect of kangaroo rats on abiotic and biotic factors appears to result in greater founding and survivorship of young colonies near mounds. These results suggest that soil disturbance and foraging by rodents can have subtle impacts on the distribution and demography of other species.
促进作用是指一个物种增强另一个物种的环境或表现,这种作用在空间上可能高度集中。虽然植物群落中的促进作用已经得到了深入研究,但促进作用对动物群落形成的作用还不太为人理解。在奇瓦瓦沙漠,袋鼠鼠和收获蚁都依赖于大量的一年生植物种子。然而,有假设认为袋鼠鼠通过土壤扰动和选择性种子捕食来促进收获蚁的生长,而不是与它们竞争。我使用了一种空间显式的方法来检验斑尾袋鼠鼠(Dipodomys spectabilis)丘和粗糙收获蚁(Pogonomyrmex rugosus)蚁群之间是否存在正或负的相互作用。通过比较带有和不带有种间效应的拟合空间点过程模型来测试丘和蚁群之间是否存在尺度相关的相互作用。此外,还研究了靠近丘对蚁群死亡率和幸存蚁群空间模式的影响。袋鼠鼠丘和收获蚁蚁群的空间模式与小尺度(<10 米)上的种间正相互作用一致。当靠近袋鼠鼠丘时,脆弱的、最近建立的收获蚁蚁群的死亡率风险较低,而靠近丘的位置部分预测了幸存蚁群的空间模式。我的发现支持袋鼠鼠对收获蚁的局部促进作用,这可能是通过生态系统工程和对植物覆盖和组成的觅食作用来介导的。袋鼠鼠对生物和非生物因素的尺度依赖效应似乎导致了蚁群在丘附近的更高的建立率和生存率。这些结果表明,啮齿动物的土壤扰动和觅食可能对其他物种的分布和种群动态产生微妙的影响。