School of Environmental Sciences, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
Department of Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, London, UK.
J Anim Ecol. 2018 Jan;87(1):293-300. doi: 10.1111/1365-2656.12728. Epub 2017 Aug 8.
Ants are diverse and abundant, especially in tropical ecosystems. They are often cited as the agents of key ecological processes, but their precise contributions compared with other organisms have rarely been quantified. Through the removal of food resources from the forest floor and subsequent transport to nests, ants play an important role in the redistribution of nutrients in rainforests. This is an essential ecosystem process and a key energetic link between higher trophic levels, decomposers and primary producers. We used the removal of carbohydrate, protein and seed baits as a proxy to quantify the contribution that ants, other invertebrates and vertebrates make to the redistribution of nutrients around the forest floor, and determined to what extent there is functional redundancy across ants, other invertebrate and vertebrate groups. Using a large-scale, field-based manipulation experiment, we suppressed ants from c. 1 ha plots in a lowland tropical rainforest in Sabah, Malaysia. Using a combination of treatment and control plots, and cages to exclude vertebrates, we made food resources available to: (i) the whole foraging community, (ii) only invertebrates and (iii) only non-ant invertebrates. This allowed us to partition bait removal into that taken by vertebrates, non-ant invertebrates and ants. Additionally, we examined how the non-ant invertebrate community responded to ant exclusion. When the whole foraging community had access to food resources, we found that ants were responsible for 52% of total bait removal whilst vertebrates and non-ant invertebrates removed the remaining 48%. Where vertebrates were excluded, ants carried out 61% of invertebrate-mediated bait removal, with all other invertebrates removing the remaining 39%. Vertebrates were responsible for just 24% of bait removal and invertebrates (including ants) collectively removed the remaining 76%. There was no compensation in bait removal rate when ants and vertebrates were excluded, indicating low functional redundancy between these groups. This study is the first to quantify the contribution of ants to the removal of food resources from rainforest floors and thus nutrient redistribution. We demonstrate that ants are functionally unique in this role because no other organisms compensated to maintain bait removal rate in their absence. As such, we strengthen a growing body of evidence establishing ants as ecosystem engineers, and provide new insights into the role of ants in maintaining key ecosystem processes. In this way, we further our basic understanding of the functioning of tropical rainforest ecosystems.
蚂蚁种类繁多,数量丰富,尤其是在热带生态系统中。它们经常被认为是关键生态过程的驱动者,但它们与其他生物相比的具体贡献很少被量化。通过从森林地面移除食物资源并随后将其运送到巢穴,蚂蚁在热带雨林中养分再分配中发挥了重要作用。这是一个基本的生态系统过程,也是更高营养级、分解者和初级生产者之间的关键能量联系。我们使用去除碳水化合物、蛋白质和种子诱饵作为指标,来量化蚂蚁、其他无脊椎动物和脊椎动物对森林地面周围养分再分配的贡献,并确定在多大程度上蚂蚁、其他无脊椎动物和脊椎动物之间存在功能冗余。通过一项大规模的实地操作实验,我们从马来西亚沙巴的一个低地热带雨林中约 1 公顷的样地中抑制了蚂蚁。使用处理和对照样地以及笼子来排除脊椎动物,我们使食物资源可供以下三种情况使用:(i)整个觅食群落,(ii)仅无脊椎动物,(iii)仅非蚂蚁无脊椎动物。这使我们能够将诱饵去除分为脊椎动物、非蚂蚁无脊椎动物和蚂蚁所取食的部分。此外,我们还研究了非蚂蚁无脊椎动物群落对蚂蚁排除的反应。当整个觅食群落可以获取食物资源时,我们发现蚂蚁负责了 52%的总诱饵去除,而脊椎动物和非蚂蚁无脊椎动物则去除了剩余的 48%。当排除脊椎动物时,蚂蚁承担了 61%的无脊椎动物介导的诱饵去除,而所有其他无脊椎动物则去除了剩余的 39%。脊椎动物仅负责 24%的诱饵去除,而无脊椎动物(包括蚂蚁)则共同去除了剩余的 76%。当排除蚂蚁和脊椎动物时,在诱饵去除率上没有补偿,表明这些群体之间的功能冗余很低。这项研究首次量化了蚂蚁对从雨林地面移除食物资源从而促进养分再分配的贡献。我们证明,蚂蚁在这个角色中是功能独特的,因为在它们不存在的情况下,没有其他生物能够补偿来维持诱饵去除率。因此,我们加强了越来越多的证据,证明蚂蚁是生态系统工程师,并为蚂蚁在维持关键生态过程中的作用提供了新的见解。通过这种方式,我们进一步加深了对热带雨林生态系统功能的基本理解。