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Ant assemblages in isolated trees are more sensitive to species loss and replacement than their woodland counterparts
Authors:Aaron D Gove  Jonathan D Majer  Victor Rico-Gray
Institution:1. Global Mammal Assessment program, Department of Biology and Biotechnologies, Sapienza Università di Roma, Viale dell''Università 32, I-00185 Rome, Italy;2. Microsoft Research Computational Science Laboratory, 21 Station Road, Cambridge CB1 FB, UK;3. Department of Environmental Biology, Sapienza Università di Roma, P. le A. Moro 5, I-00185 Rome, Italy;4. PROGES Consulting – Progetti di Sviluppo – S.r.l., Via Appennini, 4600198 Roma, Italy;5. School of Life Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 4041, South Africa;6. Scientific Services, SANParks, Private Bag X402, Skukuza 1350, South Africa;7. Department of Zoology, Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, PO Box 77000, Port Elizabeth 6031, South Africa
Abstract:Isolated trees possess an arthropod assemblage different to that found in woodland trees. While isolated trees become an increasingly dominant part of many landscapes, with ‘off reserve’ habitat conservation potential, we know little about the drivers of their assemblage structure. While sampling bimonthly for 12 months in the seasonally dry tropics of Mexico, we characterized the ant species most likely to occupy isolated trees in comparison to small woody patches (‘matorral’; 0.13–0.74 ha), and examined the influence of environmental variables on the respective ant assemblages at both canopy and ground level. Isolated trees possessed a predictable ant assemblage: when compared to the woodland patches, isolated trees were characterised by a lack of specialised arboreal species and an increase in generalised terrestrial species reaching the canopy. Arboreal woodland ant species were as affected by tree isolation as the terrestrial woodland ant fauna. Ant assemblages at isolated trees correlated with a series of microenvironmental (microclimate and biophysical) variables, but this was not the case for the ant assemblages in woodlands. This suggests that at very small habitat sizes (e.g., isolated trees), microenvironment influences assemblage composition by favouring more environmentally tolerant or opportunistic species. Although we were unable to identify alternative variables (e.g., patch area, connectivity) which correlated with assemblage composition in larger habitat patches, it appears that in such patches, local microenvironment is less closely associated with assemblage structure, and variables such as patch and landscape configuration become increasingly important. In a practical sense, micro-habitat restoration aimed at augmentation of vegetation surrounding isolated trees may therefore be an effective means of increasing matrix habitat quality and increasing the partitioning of the arboreal and terrestrial faunas, thereby conserving a broader range of species. More generally, movement of matrix species into habitat patches appears to apply universally over a range of scales and taxa, and provides a distinct contrast to the predictions based on the Theory of Island Biogeography.
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