Department of Biology, Miami University, 700 E High St, 212 Pearson Hall, Oxford, OH, 45056, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences and Environmental Change Initiative, University of Notre Dame, 721 Flanner Hall, Notre Dame, IN, 46556, USA.
Oecologia. 2019 Nov;191(3):633-644. doi: 10.1007/s00442-019-04516-8. Epub 2019 Oct 1.
Ungulate browse and invasive plants exert pressure on plant communities and alter the physical and chemical properties of soils, but little is known about their effects on litter-dwelling arthropods. In particular, ants (Formicidae) are ubiquitous in temperate forests and are sensitive to changes in habitat structure and resources. As ants play many functional roles, changes to ant communities may lead to changes in ecosystem processes. We conducted a long-term experiment that controlled white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) access and presence of an invasive understory shrub in deciduous forests located in southwestern Ohio, USA from 2011 to 2017. Several leaf-litter ant community responses and litter biomass were measured in five paired deer access and exclosure plots, each with a split-plot removal of Amur honeysuckle (Lonicera maackii). Ant abundance and species richness increased with time in deer exclosures, but not in deer access plots. Honeysuckle removal reduced abundance and richness of ants. There were additive effects of deer and honeysuckle on ant richness, and interactive effects of deer and honeysuckle on ant abundance. Deer exclusion reduced variation in ant composition relative to access plots. There was little evidence that treatments directly influenced species diversity of ants. However, all ant measures were positively related to litter biomass, which was greater in deer exclosures relative to access plots. Our results indicate strong indirect effects of herbivores and honeysuckle on litter-dwelling ants, mediated through changes in litter biomass and likely vegetation structure, which may alter ant-mediated ecosystem processes.
有蹄类动物的啃食和入侵植物会对植物群落施加压力,并改变土壤的物理和化学性质,但人们对它们对凋落物栖息节肢动物的影响知之甚少。特别是蚂蚁(Formicidae)在温带森林中无处不在,对栖息地结构和资源的变化很敏感。由于蚂蚁在生态系统中发挥着多种功能,因此蚂蚁群落的变化可能会导致生态系统过程发生变化。我们从 2011 年到 2017 年在美国俄亥俄州西南部的落叶林中进行了一项长期实验,该实验控制了白尾鹿(Odocoileus virginianus)的进入和入侵的林下灌木的存在。在 5 个配对的鹿进入和围栏样地中测量了几个叶凋落物蚂蚁群落的响应和凋落物生物量,每个样地都进行了金银花(Lonicera maackii)的分块去除。在鹿围栏中,随着时间的推移,蚂蚁的丰度和物种丰富度增加,但在鹿进入的样地中则没有。金银花的去除减少了蚂蚁的丰度和丰富度。鹿和金银花对蚂蚁丰富度的影响具有加性,而鹿和金银花对蚂蚁丰度的影响具有交互作用。鹿的排除减少了相对于进入样地的蚂蚁组成的变异性。几乎没有证据表明处理直接影响蚂蚁的物种多样性。但是,所有蚂蚁措施均与凋落物生物量呈正相关,鹿围栏中的凋落物生物量大于进入样地。我们的结果表明,食草动物和金银花通过改变凋落物生物量和可能的植被结构,对凋落物栖息的蚂蚁产生强烈的间接影响,这可能会改变蚂蚁介导的生态系统过程。