Institute of Grassland Science/School of Environment, Northeast Normal University, and Key Laboratory of Vegetation Ecology/Key Laboratory for Wetland Ecology and Vegetation Restoration, Changchun, Jilin 130024, People's Republic of China.
Institute of Grassland Science/School of Environment, Northeast Normal University, and Key Laboratory of Vegetation Ecology/Key Laboratory for Wetland Ecology and Vegetation Restoration, Changchun, Jilin 130024, People's Republic of China
Proc Biol Sci. 2018 Oct 10;285(1888):20181665. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2018.1665.
While positive interactions have been well documented in plant and sessile benthic marine communities, their role in structuring mobile animal communities and underlying mechanisms has been less explored. Using field removal experiments, we demonstrated that a large vertebrate herbivore (cattle; ) and a much smaller invertebrate (ants; spp.), the two dominant animal taxa in a semi-arid grassland in Northeast China, facilitate each other. Cattle grazing led to higher ant mound abundance compared with ungrazed sites, while the presence of ant mounds increased the foraging of cattle during the peak of the growing season. Mechanistically, these reciprocal positive effects were driven by habitat amelioration and resource (food) enhancement by cattle and ants (respectively). Cattle facilitated ants, probably by decreasing plant litter accumulation by herbivory and trampling, allowing more light to reach the soil surface leading to microclimatic conditions that favour ants. Ants facilitated cattle probably by increasing soil nutrients via bioturbation, increasing food (plant) biomass and quality (nitrogen content) for cattle. Our study demonstrates reciprocal facilitative interactions between two animal species from phylogenetically very distant taxa. Such reciprocal positive interactions may be more common in animal communities than so far assumed, and they should receive more attention to improve our understanding of species coexistence and animal community assembly.
虽然植物和固着底栖海洋生物群落中的正相互作用已经得到了很好的记录,但它们在构建活动动物群落和潜在机制中的作用还没有得到充分的探索。使用野外去除实验,我们证明了大型脊椎动物食草动物(牛)和一个小得多的无脊椎动物(蚂蚁; spp.),这两个是中国东北半干旱草原上的两个主要动物类群,彼此之间存在互利共生关系。与未放牧的地点相比,牛的放牧导致蚂蚁蚁丘的数量增加,而蚂蚁蚁丘的存在增加了牛在生长季节高峰期的觅食活动。从机制上讲,这些相互的正效应是由牛和蚂蚁(分别)通过栖息地改善和资源(食物)增强来驱动的。牛可能通过食草和踩踏减少植物凋落物的积累来促进蚂蚁的生存,从而使更多的光到达土壤表面,导致有利于蚂蚁的小气候条件。蚂蚁可能通过生物扰动增加土壤养分,增加牛的食物(植物)生物量和质量(氮含量)来促进牛的生存。我们的研究表明,两种来自系统发育上非常遥远的类群的动物物种之间存在互惠互利的相互作用。这种互惠的正相互作用在动物群落中可能比目前假设的更为普遍,应该更多地关注它们,以提高我们对物种共存和动物群落组装的理解。