Programa de Pós-Graduação em Biologia Animal, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil.
Departamento de Ecologia, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil.
PLoS One. 2019 Apr 11;14(4):e0215310. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0215310. eCollection 2019.
Understanding biological community distribution patterns and their drivers across different scales is one of the major goals of community ecology in a rapidly changing world. Considering natural forest-grassland ecotones distributed over the south Brazilian region we investigated how ant communities are assembled locally, i.e. considering different habitats, and regionally, i.e. considering different physiographic regions. We used taxonomic and phylogenetic approaches to investigate diversity patterns and search for environmental/spatial drivers at each scale. We sampled ants using honey and tuna baits in forest and grassland habitats, in ecotones distributed at nine sites in Rio Grande do Sul state, Brazil. Overall, we found 85 ant species belonging to 23 genera and six subfamilies. At the local scale, we found forests and grasslands as equivalent in ant species and evolutionary history diversities, but considerably different in terms of species composition. In forests, the soil surface air temperature predicts foraging ant diversity. In grasslands, while the height of herbaceous vegetation reduces ant diversity, treelet density from forest expansion processes clearly increases it. At a regional scale, we did not find models that sufficiently explained ant taxonomic and phylogenetic diversity based on regional environmental variables. The variance in species composition, but not in evolutionary histories, across physiographic regions is driven by space and historical processes. Our findings unveil important aspects of ant community ecology in natural transition systems, indicating environmental filtering as an important process structuring the communities at the local scale, but mostly spatial processes acting at the regional scale.
理解生物群落的分布模式及其在不同尺度上的驱动因素是快速变化世界中群落生态学的主要目标之一。考虑到分布在巴西南部地区的天然森林-草原生态交错带,我们研究了蚂蚁群落是如何在局部(即考虑不同的栖息地)和区域(即考虑不同的地貌区域)尺度上组装的。我们使用分类学和系统发育方法来研究多样性模式,并在每个尺度上寻找环境/空间驱动因素。我们在巴西南里奥格兰德州的九个地点的生态交错带中,使用蜂蜜和金枪鱼诱饵在森林和草原栖息地中采样蚂蚁。总的来说,我们发现了 85 种蚂蚁,属于 23 个属和 6 个亚科。在局部尺度上,我们发现森林和草原在蚂蚁物种和进化历史多样性方面是等效的,但在物种组成方面却有很大的不同。在森林中,土壤表面空气温度预测了觅食蚂蚁的多样性。在草原上,虽然草本植被的高度降低了蚂蚁的多样性,但森林扩张过程中小树密度的增加明显增加了它。在区域尺度上,我们没有发现基于区域环境变量能够充分解释蚂蚁分类和系统发育多样性的模型。地貌区域之间的物种组成方差,但不是进化历史方差,是由空间和历史过程驱动的。我们的研究结果揭示了自然过渡系统中蚂蚁群落生态学的重要方面,表明环境过滤是在局部尺度上构建群落的一个重要过程,但主要是空间过程在区域尺度上起作用。