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1.
Summary Ants were collected with sets of pitfall traps in four coniferous-forest habitats in southern Finland. A three-level competition hierarchy concept was used to generate predictions on ant community structure. The levels of the hierarchy, and the respective predictions, from top to bottom were: (1) The dominant territorial wood ants (Formica rufa-group species), expected to exclude each other. (2) The other aggressive species, likely to be excluded by the F. rufa-group. (3) The submissive species, non-aggressive and defending only their nest, and thus likely to coexist with the dominants but in reduced numbers. As expected, the species of the F. rufa-group excluded each other, and the species number of the other aggressive ants was significantly cut down in the presence of the F. rufa-group. The aggressive species F. sanguinea and Camponotus herculeanus showed complementary occurrences with the F. rufa-group, and Lasius niger reduced occurrences. The number of the submissive species was not significantly affected by the F. rufa-group. However, pairwise correlation coefficients were significantly more often negative than positive between presence of the F. rufa-group and average proportion of pitfalls per set with a submissive species, each analyzed in turn. The result indicates that the F. rufa-group also reduced the colony densities of the submissive species. We conclude that in the taiga biome territorial wood ants are, after adjusting for physical vicissitudes of the environment, the major structuring force of ant species assemblages.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The speciesFormica aquilonia andF. lugubris of the mound-building red wood ants have a disjunct boreoalpine distribution in Europe. The populations ofF. aquilonia in Finland, Switzerland and the British Isles show little genetic differentiation, whereas the populations ofF. lugubris show considerable differentiation. The Central European populations morphologically identified asF. lugubris can be genetically divided into two groups (here called types A and B). Type B is found in the Alps and the Jura mountains, and is genetically inseparable fromF. aquilonia. Type A lives sympatrically with type B in the Jura mountains and is also found in the British Isles. Sympatry of the two types in the Jura shows that these are separate species. It remains open whether type B is morphologically atypicalF. aquilonia or whether it is a separate species, perhaps with a past history of introgression betweenF. aquilonia andF. lugubris. The gene frequencies in the Finnish populations ofF. lugubris differ from those of both types A and B. Genetic differences withinF. lugubris indicate that the populations have evolved separately for a long time. The social structure ofF. lugubris colonies also shows geographic variation. The nests in Finland and the British Isles seem to be mainly monogynous and monodomous, whereas the nests in Central Europe are polygynous and form polydomous colonies.F. aquilonia has polygynous and polydomous colonies in all populations studied.  相似文献   

3.
Understanding habitat requirements of species is important in conservation. As an obligate ant nest associate, the survival of the globally vulnerable shining guest ant, Formicoxenus nitidulus, is strictly tied to that of its hosts (mound building Formica ants). We investigated how host species, nest density, inter-nest distance and nest mound size relate to the occurrence of F. nitidulus. In total, 166 red wood ant nests were surveyed in SW Finland (120 Formica polyctena, 25 F. rufa, 14 F. aquilonia, 5 F. pratensis, and 2 F. lugubris). Overall, F. nitidulus was found in 60% of the nests. For the actual analysis, only F. polyctena and F. rufa nests were included due to the small number of other nests. F. nitidulus was more likely to be found among F. polyctena than F. rufa. Also, while inter-nest distance was not important, a high nest density, commonly found in polydomous (multi-nest) wood ant colonies, was beneficial for F. nitidulus. The guest ant was also more likely to be found in large host nests than small nests. Thus, our results show that the best habitat for the guest ant is a dense population of host nest mounds with a high proportion of large mounds. Conservation efforts should be directed at keeping the quality of the red wood ant habitats high to preserve their current populations and to increase colonization. This will not only benefit the guest ant, but also a plethora of other species, and help in maintaining the biodiversity of forests.  相似文献   

4.
The variability of size, chaetotaxy, the petiole shape, and mandible dentition in workers of F. aquilonia was studied in the Verkhnyaya Klyazma Myrmecological Preserve (Moscow Province, Russia), where populations of red wood ants (F. aquilonia, F. polyctena, and F. lugubris) have been monitored since 1966. Comparative analysis of samples from two different F. aquilonia settlements (A1 and A21S) showed that workers from A1 had a smaller size and more abundant pilosity. The variability of the molar margin of the mandibles was similar in the two settlements while the petiole shape differed. Comparison of three generations of workers from A1 (the seasons of 1969, 1986, and 1992) revealed significant changes in their phenotype (a decrease in size and an increase in pilosity and asymmetry) which coincided with the settlement degradation after mass destruction of ant nests by poachers, wild boars, and woodpeckers in 1977–1985.  相似文献   

5.
Mound‐building ants (Formica spp.), as key species, have large impacts on organisms and ecosystem functions in boreal Eurasian forests. The density, sizes and locations of ant mounds determine the magnitude and the spatial distribution of ant activities in forest ecosystems. Clear‐cutting can destroy wood ant colonies, and the species, abundance, dimensions and locations of ant mounds may change as forest stand structure changes with stand age. We compared ant species composition, ant mound numbers and dimensions, and the spatial distribution of mounds in Norway spruce [Picea abies (L.) Karst.] stands of different age (5, 30, 60 and 100 years) in eastern Finland. The mound density of Formica aquilonia Yarr. was greater in the two oldest stand age classes, while most mounds of Formica rufa L., Formica polyctena Först., Formica lugubris Zett., Formica exsecta Nyl. and Formica pressilabris Nyl. were found in the two youngest age classes. The mean volume, the volume per area and height/diameter ratio of F. aquilonia mounds increased with stand age. In the oldest stand age class, mounds were slightly smaller in well‐lit locations than in shade and near stand edges than further from the edges indicating that new mounds are established in well‐lit locations. Similarly, the longest slopes of the mounds faced south, indicating the importance of exposure to the sun. F. aquilonia mounds were concentrated near stand edges, and the spatial distribution of the mounds was aggregated in some stands. At the ecosystem level, the aggregation of ant mounds near stand edges may increase the edge productivity, as mounds concentrate resources to the edges and release nutrients after abandonment.  相似文献   

6.
The ants Formica aquilonia and F. lugubris which inhabit the entire forest zone of the North Palaearctic and are absent from the basins of the Yana, Indigirka, and Kolyma rivers were found in the coastal area of the Sea of Okhotsk. A possible climatic conditionality of their occurrence in the Northeast is considered based on the data on the biotopic distribution of ants, the temperature causation of their overwintering, and cold hardiness. On the Sea of Okhotsk coast, these ants overwinter at a depth of 40–200 cm in the soil. During winter, the minimum soil temperature at a depth of 40 cm under the anthill was ?5°C. The supercooling temperature of F. aquilonia was not lower than ?20.2 ± 0.5°C, that of F. lugubris, not lower than ?19.6 ± 0.4°C. Half of F. aquilonia individuals did not survive the daily exposure at ?13°C, F. lugubris, at ?16°C. These two cold-resistant species could inhabit some biotopes of the Kolyma River basin, similar to F. exsecta, F. lemani, and F. sanguinea, but they are absent there for some reasons that are not related to the temperature. A similar cold hardiness is characteristic of F. aquilonia in Estonia (Maavara, 1971, 1985), where it represents a side effect of diapause, since excessive cold hardiness has no adaptive significance for insects overwintering in the non-freezing soils of Estonia. Colonization of Siberia by ant species turned out to be possible only due to the existing cold hardiness, i.e. preadaptation to low temperature. On the Sea of Okhotsk coast, cold hardiness of the ants is non-adaptive due to the relatively mild conditions during winter.  相似文献   

7.
Summary In a laboratory choice-test, free-living ant workers ofFormica cunicularia andF. rufibarbis (subgenusServiformica), both potentially slave species of the obligatory slave-makerPolyergus rufescens, cared for cocoons of this parasite and for homocolonial cocoons at comparable rates. Both potential hosts did not differ in their capacity to rear the parasite brood. This fact is discussed in relation to host selection and specificity inP. rufescens. No such attraction and/or tolerance was found towards cocoons of the facultative slave-makerFormica sanguinea, which also enslaves both host species. Workers ofF. lugubris, a species which is never enslaved, destroyed cocoons from both slave-making species. The attractiveness of the brood ofP. rufescens for both potentially slave species could be due to an interspecific brood pheromone in addition to brood mimicry. An alternative hypothesis is a close phylogenetic distance between this slave-maker andServiformica species. The capacity to gain acceptance by adult slave workers might be one of the crucial evolutionary steps separating obligatory from facultative slave-making ants.  相似文献   

8.
Red wood ants (Formica s.str.) are not prevalent in the forests of North America, but commonly occur in conifer and mixed conifer forests in northern Europe and Asia. In 1971, a European red wood ant species, Formica lugubris, was intentionally established in a 35‐year‐old predominantly mixed conifer plantation approximately 30 km north of QC, Canada. The purpose of its introduction was to evaluate the potential of this species as a biological control agent against conifer‐defoliating Lepidoptera species. This red wood ant introduction was monitored periodically for about 5 years after establishment, but its long‐term fate has not been reported. We visited this field site in 2005 and found that this species was well established, and we could locate some of the nests that resulted from the original release. We mapped and measured over 100 nests around the site of original release, which ranged from 5 cm in height to over 1 m. We estimated the population of introduced ants to have grown to over 8 million in the last 34 years. Significant clustering of nests suggests that these nests may be one supercolony. F. lugubris has become a dominant understory arthropod in this mixed forest, and is likely to have ecological impacts, including effects at the community and ecosystem level.  相似文献   

9.
Many ant assemblages are organised in competitive hierarchies. Myrmica rugulosa, a submissive species at the bottom of the ant competition hierarchy, temporarily took over groups of the myrmecophilic aphid Stomaphis quercus, which is strictly associated with the territorial ant species Lasius fuliginosus. Such previously unknown intervention happened repeatedly on the nest tree of L. fuliginosus. Masses of M. rugulosa intruded into bark crevices harbouring the aphids, and blocked with their own bodies access of L. fuliginosus to the aphids. Lasius fuliginosus showed no aggression towards the intruders, but walked around and on M. rugulosa clusters, palpating foreign ants with their antennae. Their only countermeasure was to briefly drag or carry individual M. rugulosa workers that pressed themselves down and froze for the moment, and then resumed their activities. We interpret the behaviour of M. rugulosa, in the context of its already known interspecific relations, as a specific competitive means of existence with higher-ranked species. The behaviour—by strict definition neither interference nor exploitation competition—effectively combines submissiveness, appeasement and tenacity. We discuss similarities between such behaviour and related behaviour reported earlier in a few other Myrmica species and Manica rubida while confronting physically stronger ants.  相似文献   

10.
The search for ecological indicators of population well-being in natural and managed ecosystems is a crucial aspect of effective biomonitoring, conservation and nature protection. In long-term monitoring programs environmental stress has a measurable effect on naturally selected traits, such as body shape or size. However, changes in colouration provide information about early warning responses. The red wood ant Formica aquilonia is ecologically and territorially dominant among wood ant species in European boreal coniferous forest, and possesses variable red-brownish melanin-based cuticular colouration. F. aquilonia gynes, which are unfertilized queens, exhibit colour variability on the head, propodeum and abdomen, yet only head colour features allow setting clearly visible and symmetrical (left/right) classes of morphs. We studied phenotypic colour variability, melanisation and fluctuating asymmetry of colour patterns in faces of F. aquilonia gynes from natural (forest interiors) and disturbed (clear-cut zones and forest edges) habitats in Finland. We defined five variable, clearly visible and symmetrical (left/right) colour morphs of gynes' faces. Individuals of totally dark morph were present only in disturbed habitats. General analyses of melanisation degree showed, that gynes from disturbed habitats were significantly darker compared to those from forest interiors. Individuals from the same nest tend to have a similar degree of melanisation. The mean darkness of face was highest among individuals from forest-edge nests and the lowest from forest interior nests. In all habitat types the darkness of face increased with an increase in head width. Increase of cuticular melanisation in F. aquilonia gynes in disturbed habitats could be explained with the theory of thermal melanism and stress-induced immune defence. Although some amount of fluctuating asymmetry among left/right symmetrical colour variations on faces of F. aquilonia gynes was found, it was affected neither by habitat type nor by head width. Melanisation degree of red wood ants have a potency to be used as ecological indicator for the level of disturbance in managed coniferous forests and fluctuating asymmetry of colour variations in ants might be studied furtherly in cases of more severe environmental concerns.  相似文献   

11.
Ants are ecologically important species in many environments forming a big proportion of the total animal biomass. However, their special features such as sociality and complementary sex-determination system have received little attention in conservation discussions. We examined the social and genetic structure of the hairy wood ant Formica lugubris in Ireland to evaluate factors relevant to the vulnerability of small, isolated wood ant populations. We also clarified the conservation status of the species in Ireland. Our results showed that the populations are mainly monogynous (one queen per nest). Consequently the effective population size is very low (<100 individuals) in Ireland. We found extremely little genetic variation, signs of inbreeding and inbreeding depression, which can be a consequence of the small effective population size and of the restricted gene flow due to strong isolation of populations. Putatively high genetic diversity at the sex-determining locus can reflect a larger population in the past. The study shows that even though the population may seem stable because of the long life span of queen ants, sociality can impact species conservation by keeping the effective population size small. According to our results, the hairy wood ant can be considered native to Ireland. Hence it needs urgent protection and the genetic issues need to be considered in the future management strategies.  相似文献   

12.
1. The influence of a wood ant, Formica aquilonia, on the defoliation of the white birch, Betula pubescens, and on its invertebrate community was studied in ant-exclusion experiments during two outbreaks, the decline phase of the autumnal moth, Epirrita autumnata, and the peak year of the birch aphid, Euceraphis punctipennis, not tended by ants. 2. The numbers of the wood ant and Symydobius oblongus, a tended aphid, in birch foliage showed a strong positive correlation, and the former decreased rapidly when the distance from the ant mound increased, confirming that there was a distance-related gradient in arboreal ant predation. There may have been a parallel reduction in soil amelioration by ants through nest construction and food gathering. 3. The application of a glue ring around the trunk excluded ants totally from the canopy, inhibiting predation but not fertilization. 4. Ant-exclusion resulted in a 90–95% reduction in the growth of tended aphid colonies by mid-season. 5. Outbreak populations of the autumnal moth and the birch aphid were reduced by 45–67% and 77%, respectively, in control trees and correlated negatively with ant numbers. 6. The total percentage of leaf area damaged by moth larvae was 34% lower in ant-foraged than in unforaged trees. 7. Neither the distance from the ant mound nor its interaction with the glue treatment had any effect on the herbivores or folivory, indicating that the possible soil-ameliorating effect was weaker than predation, which reduced herbivore numbers at every distance studied (4–20 m). 8. Predation by ants also affected the abundance of syrphid larvae, predatory on both aphids, the percentage parasitism by a wasp, Aleiodes testaceus, on the autumnal moth, and thereby (or directly) its age (size) distribution. The presence of ants had no influence on spider abundance. 9. It is concluded that predation rather than soil amelioration is likely to be the reason why the degree of folivory and, during serious outbreaks, the mortality of trees are lower in the vicinity of wood-ant mounds.  相似文献   

13.
A previously undocumented association between earthworms and red wood ants (Formicaaquilonia Yarr.) was found during an investigation of the influence of wood ants on the distribution and abundance of soil animals in boreal forest soil. Ant nest mounds and the surrounding soil of the ant territories were sampled. The ant nest mound surface (the uppermost 5-cm layer) harboured a much more abundant earthworm community than the surrounding soil; the biomass of the earthworms was about 7 times higher in the nests than in the soil. Dendrodrilusrubidus dominated the earthworm community in the nests, while in soils Dendrobaenaoctaedra was more abundant. Favorable temperature, moisture and pH (Ca content), together with abundant food supply (microbes and decomposing litter) are likely to make a nest mound a preferred habitat for earthworms, provided that they are not preyed upon by the ants. We also conducted laboratory experiments to study antipredation mechanisms of earthworms against ants. The experiments showed that earthworms do not escape predation by avoiding contact with ants in their nests. The earthworm mucus repelled the ants, suggesting a chemical defence against predation. Earthworms probably prevent the nest mounds from becoming overgrown by moulds and fungi, indicating possible mutualistic relationships between the earthworms and the ants. Received: 21 November 1996 / Accepted: 3 April 1997  相似文献   

14.
Seed harvesting ants can have important effects on the composition and structure of plant communities. We investigated two effects of Messor andrei, the black seed-harvesting ant, on a serpentine grassland plant community in northern California. First, to determine if selective seed predation by ants affects plant community composition, we excluded harvester ants from 1-mediameter circular plots of grassland. Abundances of all species on these plots and on control plots were measured before and after exclosure. Second, to determine if M. andrei nest mounds affect plant community composition, we compared plant species abundances on and off nest mounds. M. andrei deposit large amounts of organic matter on their nest mounds over a foraging season, so mounds may alter the edaphic environment. The exclusion of seed-harvesting activity did not cause changes in the plant community. Nest mounds had a strong effect on plant communities: there were many more grasses and fewer forbs on ant mounds, although at least one forb, Lepidium nitidum, produced twice as many seeds when it grew on nest mounds. We found that nest mounds formed islands of higher-temperature soil in the serpentine grassland. Received: 31 March 1997 / Accepted: 6 May 1997  相似文献   

15.
Specific features of ant behavior during the extremely hot summer of 2010 were studied, as well as the aftereffects of this season on simple and complex family units of ants in 2011–2012. Simultaneous studies were carried out in southern taiga (Moscow Province, Verkhnaya Klyazma myrmecological protected area) and northern taiga (Arkhangelsk Province, Pinezhskii Nature Reserve). Ants of the genus Formica responded to the extreme heat by (1) changing their foraging patterns; (2) redesigning their nests; (3) rearranging the spatial and functional structure of the colonies. They switched to a bimodal activity pattern with maxima in the morning and in the evening and a prolonged daytime intermission. Along ant roads, there were underground pavilions with dense roofs built of conifer needles and soil. Covers of the same kind appeared over root aphid colonies. The most radical improvement was the construction of a battery of brood chambers underneath the mound. The soil excavated was used for strengthening the mound and restricting the convective heat exchange between the brood chambers and the external environment. The anthill surface was covered with a smooth crusted layer of soil and fine plant debris particles, which protected the nest from the inflow of hot air from without. A portion of the inhabitants of large nests moved to newly built extensions and auxiliary nests. It was only active, non-damaged colonies that could afford these measures and thus survive the heat with minimal loss. Depressed colonies lost the major part of their brood during this time. Furthermore, small secondary colonies that emerged as the result of destructive activity of animals also failed to reassemble due to the summer heat of 2010. The months of heat were followed by a long rainy and cool period, and the colonies that had already been depressed faced critical conditions for preparing for winter. The ants were unable to accumulate lipid reserves sufficient for spring nest heating and rearing of sexuals and workers, which turned out to be an important aftereffect of the 2010 season the following year. Two first generations of workers were absent in almost all the nests. Mass oviposition in F. aquilonia commenced only late in May 2011, whereas the flight of alates did not occur at all because alates of this species are only reared in spring. Consequently, the F. aquilonia colonies had not recovered even by the end of 2012. In F. lugubris and F. polyctena, species that rear sexuals twice a year, there was only late-season alate flight, and yet it allowed their colonies to replenish the pool of ovipositing females and restore the initial colony size by the end of 2012. Other ants, represented by Lasius niger and Myrmica rubra, also modified their nests and foraging patterns during the period of heat. M. rubra suffered the most, so that its abundance and activity remained very low in 2011 as well. Only L. niger, which remained practically unscathed by the heat, successfully completed its annual cycle in 2010. Therefore, one of the 2010 year’s results was a drastic shift in the ratio of nests built by the abovementioned species in favor of L. niger.  相似文献   

16.
The survival of insects during diapause may be affected by overwintering temperature and other environmental stress, such as anthropogenic habitat degradation. We experimentally studied the effects of overwintering temperature (+1 and +7°C) and commercial forest clear-cutting on the overwintering survival of the forest-dwelling wood ant Formica aquilonia. We found that both the higher overwintering temperature and clear-cutting lowered the overwintering survival and body fat resources of Formica aquilonia. The survival and body fat resources were highest in lower temperature treatment forest nests and lowest in higher temperature treatment clear-cut nests. The overall survival of ants increased with higher body fat resources. It is possible that both forest clear-cutting and higher winter temperature due to possible climate warming may increase the wintertime mortality of wood ants and other forest-dwelling ants.  相似文献   

17.
Red wood ants (Formica rufa group) constitute a group of species that are considered to be among the most promising bioindicators in forest ecosystems. However, because of their morphological similarity and intraspecific variability, morphological species identification can be difficult. Considerable expertise is necessary to discriminate between the sibling species F. lugubris and F. paralugubris, two species that often live in sympatry in the same Alpine forests. New taxonomic tools providing rapid and reliable species identification are needed. We present a simple and reliable molecular technique based on mtDNA (COI gene) and a restriction enzyme for discriminating between F. lugubris and F. paralugubris. We confirm the validity of this method with a Bayesian analysis based on microsatellites. This new molecular tool represents a clear breakthrough for discriminating between F. lugubris and F. paralugubris and is likely to be helpful in large‐scale biomonitoring.  相似文献   

18.
1. Full sunlight conditions in open clear‐cuts may limit the activity of ants as soil surface temperatures reach lethal levels. Therefore, differences may be expected between the diurnal and nocturnal activity of ants, and in the interactions between ant species. These predictions, however, have been poorly investigated so far. 2. The circadian activity of ants in clear‐cuts in managed forests in Poland was investigated. Repeated counts of ants were performed during the day and the following night at the clear‐cut edge and in the clear‐cut interior. Interspecific interactions and the effect of plant coverage were also considered. 3. Abundances of Formica fusca Linnaeus and red wood ants were higher during the day, whereas Myrmica were more common at night. Formica fusca, Lasius and red wood ants were more common at the clear‐cut edge than in the interior. Myrmica showed the opposite pattern, but at night, its numbers increased at the edge. Plant coverage positively affected F. fusca and red wood ants. 4. Red wood ants tended to be negatively associated with Lasius, whereas they were neutral for F. fusca. The negative association of red wood ants and Myrmica was stronger during the day compared to night. 5. The time of day was a strong driver of ant activity in the clear‐cuts, whereas the distribution of red wood ants was of lesser importance. It is concluded that circadian activity may substantially contribute to niche separation between coexisting species, therefore, studies performed exclusively during the day cannot reflect the real structure of the community.  相似文献   

19.
The Argentine ant Linepithema humile (Dolichoderinae) is one of the most widespread invasive ant species in the world. Throughout its introduced range, it is associated with the loss or reduced abundance of native ant species. The mechanisms by which these native species are displaced have received limited attention, particularly in Australia. The role of interference competition in the displacement of native ant species by L. humile was examined in coastal vegetation in central Victoria (southeastern Australia). Foragers from laboratory colonies placed in the field consistently and rapidly displaced the tyrant ant Iridomyrmex bicknelli, the big-headed ant Pheidole sp. 2, and the pony ant Rhytidoponera victoriae from baits. Numerical and behavioural dominance enabled Argentine ants to displace these ants in just 20 min; the abundance of native species at baits declined 3.5–24 fold in direct relation to the rapid increase in L. humile. Most precipitous was the decline of I. bicknelli, even though species in this typically dominant genus have been hypothesized to limit invasion of L. humile in Australia. Interspecific aggression contributed strongly to the competitive success of Argentine ants at baits. Fighting occurred in 50–75% of all observed interactions between Argentine and native ants. This study indicates that Argentine ants recruit rapidly, numerically dominate, and aggressively displace from baits a range of Australian native ant species from different subfamilies and functional groups. Such direct displacement is likely to reduce native biodiversity and indirectly alter food web structure and ecosystem processes within invaded areas. Biotic resistance to Argentine ant invasion from native ants in this coastal community in southeastern Australia is not supported in this study.  相似文献   

20.
Summary A gregarine parasite (Neogregarinida, Ophryocystidae) ofLeptothorax ants was found near West-Yellowstone, Montana, USA. Infested pupae are characterized by grey to black coloration, irregular pigmentation of compound eyes, and toothless mandibles. The pathogenic effects closely resemble those in the fire ant,Solenopsis geminata, when infested byMattesia geminata. Infested pupae die. The infection can be transmitted to healthy colonies and to differentLeptothorax species by feeding them with infested pupae.  相似文献   

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