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连通性解释了新热带林冠层中本地蚂蚁群落结构:一种大规模的实验方法。

Connectivity explains local ant community structure in a Neotropical forest canopy: a large-scale experimental approach.

机构信息

Urban Nature Research Center, Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, Los Angeles, California, 90007, USA.

Department of Biology, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky, 40292, USA.

出版信息

Ecology. 2019 Jun;100(6):e02673. doi: 10.1002/ecy.2673. Epub 2019 Apr 4.

Abstract

Understanding how habitat structure and resource availability affect local species distributions is a key goal of community ecology. Where habitats occur as a mosaic, variation in connectivity among patches influences both local species richness and composition, and connectivity is a key conservation concern in fragmented landscapes. Similarly, availability of limiting resources frequently determines species coexistence or exclusion. For primarily cursorial arthropods like ants, gaps between neighboring trees are a significant barrier to movement through the forest canopy. Competition for limited resources such as nest sites also promotes antagonistic interactions. Lianas (woody vines) connect normally isolated neighboring tree crowns and often have hollow stems inhabited by ants. We used two large-scale liana-removal experiments to determine how connectivity and nest site availability provided by lianas affect arboreal ant species richness, species composition, and β-diversity in a lowland tropical forest in Panama. Removing lianas from a tree crown reduced ant species richness up to 35%, and disproportionately affected species that require large foraging areas. Adding artificial connectivity to trees mitigated the effects of liana removal. Ant colonization of artificial nests was higher (73% occupied) in trees without lianas vs. trees with lianas (28% occupied). However, artificial nests typically were colonized by existing polydomous, resident ant species. As a result, nest addition did not affect ant community structure. Collectively, these results indicate that lianas are important to the maintenance of arboreal ant diversity specifically by providing connectivity among neighboring tree crowns. Anticipated increases in liana abundance in this forest could increase the local (tree-level) species richness of arboreal ants, with a compositional bias toward elevating the density of broad-ranging specialist predators.

摘要

理解栖息地结构和资源可利用性如何影响当地物种分布是群落生态学的一个关键目标。当栖息地以镶嵌的形式出现时,斑块之间连通性的变化会影响当地物种的丰富度和组成,而连通性是破碎景观中一个关键的保护关注点。同样,限制资源的可利用性常常决定着物种的共存或排斥。对于主要是奔跑的节肢动物(如蚂蚁)来说,相邻树木之间的空隙是穿越森林树冠的一个重大障碍。对有限资源(如巢穴)的竞争也促进了敌对的相互作用。藤本植物(木质藤本植物)连接通常孤立的相邻树冠,并且其空心茎中经常居住着蚂蚁。我们使用了两项大规模的藤本植物去除实验,以确定藤本植物提供的连通性和巢穴可用性如何影响巴拿马低地热带森林中树木上蚂蚁物种的丰富度、物种组成和 β多样性。从树冠中去除藤本植物会使蚂蚁物种丰富度降低多达 35%,并且不成比例地影响那些需要大面积觅食区的物种。向树木添加人工连通性可以减轻藤本植物去除的影响。与有藤本植物的树木相比(占 28%),没有藤本植物的树木上人工巢穴的蚂蚁殖民化率更高(73%被占据)。然而,人工巢穴通常被已有的多巢、常驻蚂蚁物种殖民化。因此,巢穴添加并没有影响蚂蚁群落结构。总的来说,这些结果表明,藤本植物通过为相邻树冠之间提供连通性,对维持树木上蚂蚁的多样性非常重要。预计该森林中藤本植物数量的增加可能会增加树木层面上树木上蚂蚁的局部(树木层面)物种丰富度,从而导致广泛分布的专门捕食者密度增加的组成性偏差。

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