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Negative Correlation between Ant and Spider Abundances in the Canopy of a Bornean Tropical Rain Forest
Authors:Motoki Katayama  Keiko Kishimoto‐Yamada  Hiroshi O. Tanaka  Tomoji Endo  Yoshiaki Hashimoto  Seiki Yamane  Takao Itioka
Affiliation:1. Graduate School of Human and Environment Studies, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan;2. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan;3. School of Human Science, Kobe College, Nishinomiya, Japan;4. Division of Phylogenetics, Institute of Natural and Environmental Sciences, University of Hyogo/Museum of Nature and Human Activities, Hyogo, Sanda, Japan;5. Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Kagoshima University, Kagoshima, Japan
Abstract:In tropical rain forests, high canopy trees have diverse and abundant populations of ants and spiders. However, accessing high trees and their fauna remains difficult; thus, how ants and spiders interact in the canopy remains unclear. To better understand the interspecific interactions between these two dominant arthropod groups, we investigated their spatial distributions at the canopy surface in a tropical rain forest in Borneo. We sampled ants and spiders six times between 2009 and 2011 by sweeping with an insect net at the tree crown surfaces of 190 emergent or tall (≥20 m in height) trees. We collected 438 ant individuals belonging to 94 species and 1850 spider individuals (1630 juveniles and 220 adults) belonging to 142 morphospecies (adults only) from a total of 976 samples. The fact that we collected four times more spider individuals than ant individuals suggests that fewer ants forage at the tree crown surface than previously thought. The number of spider individuals negatively correlated with the number of ant individuals and the number of ant species, indicating significant exclusivity between ant and spider spatial distributions at the tree crown surface. Niche‐overlap between the two taxa confirmed this observation. Although our data do not address the causes of these spatial distributions, antagonistic interspecific interactions such as interference behaviors and intra‐guild predation are ecological mechanisms that give rise to exclusive spatial distributions.
Keywords:Araneidae  Borneo  Formicidae  generalist predators  interference competition  intra‐guild interactions  Southeast Asian tropics  spatial distribution
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