Department of Earth, Ocean and Ecological Sciences, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
Department of Zoology and Entomology, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa.
Glob Chang Biol. 2022 May;28(10):3188-3205. doi: 10.1111/gcb.16140. Epub 2022 Mar 11.
Ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) are one of the most dominant terrestrial organisms worldwide. They are hugely abundant, both in terms of sheer numbers and biomass, on every continent except Antarctica and are deeply embedded within a diversity of ecological networks and processes. Ants are also eusocial and colonial organisms-their lifecycle is built on the labor of sterile worker ants who support a small number of reproductive individuals. Given the climatic changes that our planet faces, we need to understand how various important taxonomic groups will respond; this includes the ants. In this review, we synthesize the available literature to tackle this question. The answer is complicated. The ant literature has focused on temperature, and we broadly understand the ways in which thermal changes may affect ant colonies, populations, and communities. In general, we expect that species living in the Tropics, and in thermally variable microhabitats, such as the canopy and leaf litter environments, will be negatively impacted by rising temperatures. Species living in the temperate zones and those able to thermally buffer their nests in the soil or behaviorally avoid higher temperatures, however, are likely to be unaffected or may even benefit from a changed climate. How ants will respond to changes to other abiotic drivers associated with climate change is largely unknown, as is the detail on how altered ant populations and communities will ramify through their wider ecological networks. We discuss how eusociality may allow ants to adapt to, or tolerate, climate change in ways that solitary organisms cannot and we identify key geographic and phylogenetic hotspots of climate vulnerability and resistance. We finish by emphasizing the key research questions that we need to address moving forward so that we may fully appreciate how this critical insect group will respond to the ongoing climate crisis.
蚂蚁(膜翅目:蚁科)是全球最主要的陆地生物之一。它们在除南极洲以外的各大洲都非常丰富,无论是数量还是生物量都极为庞大,并且深深嵌入到各种生态网络和过程中。蚂蚁是真社会性和群居生物——它们的生命周期建立在工蚁的劳动基础上,这些工蚁没有生殖能力,却支撑着少量的生殖个体。鉴于我们的星球所面临的气候变化,我们需要了解各个重要分类群将如何做出反应;这包括蚂蚁。在这篇综述中,我们综合了现有的文献来解决这个问题。答案很复杂。蚂蚁文献主要集中在温度上,我们大致了解了热变化可能如何影响蚁群、种群和群落。一般来说,我们预计生活在热带地区和热变化微生境中的物种,如树冠和落叶环境中的物种,将受到升温的负面影响。生活在温带地区的物种和那些能够在土壤中对巢穴进行热缓冲或通过行为避免高温的物种,然而,可能不受影响,甚至可能受益于气候变化。蚂蚁将如何应对与气候变化相关的其他非生物驱动因素的变化,在很大程度上是未知的,而改变的蚂蚁种群和群落将如何通过它们更广泛的生态网络产生连锁反应的细节也不清楚。我们讨论了真社会性如何使蚂蚁能够以独居生物无法做到的方式适应或忍受气候变化,我们确定了气候脆弱性和抵抗力的关键地理和系统发育热点。最后,我们强调了我们需要解决的关键研究问题,以便我们能够充分了解这个关键昆虫群将如何应对正在进行的气候危机。