Ants as indicators of environmental change and ecosystem processes

被引:44
|
作者
Tiede, Yvonne [1 ]
Schlautmann, Jan [1 ]
Donoso, David A. [2 ,5 ]
Wallis, Christine I. B. [1 ,3 ]
Bendix, Joerg [3 ]
Brandl, Roland [4 ]
Farwig, Nina [1 ]
机构
[1] Philipps Univ Marburg, Fac Biol, Conservat Ecol, Karl von Frisch Str 8, D-35043 Marburg, Germany
[2] Univ Tecn Particular Loja, Museo Colecc Biol MUTPL, San Cayetano Alto S-N, Loja, Ecuador
[3] Philipps Univ Marburg, Fac Geog, Lab Climatol & Remote Sensing, Deutschhausstr 12, D-35032 Marburg, Germany
[4] Philipps Univ Marburg, Fac Biol, Dept Ecol, Anim Ecol, Karl von Frisch Str 8, D-35043 Marburg, Germany
[5] Escuela Politec Nacl, Inst Ciencias Biol, Av Ladron Guevara E11-253, Quito, Ecuador
关键词
Elevational gradient; Species traits; Forest degradation; Path model; Artificial caterpillars; Functional richness; FUNCTIONAL DIVERSITY; HYMENOPTERA-FORMICIDAE; CLIMATE-CHANGE; HABITAT FRAGMENTATION; RAIN-FOREST; COMMUNITY ORGANIZATION; SECONDARY FORESTS; FORAGING ACTIVITY; TROPICAL FOREST; BIODIVERSITY;
D O I
10.1016/j.ecolind.2017.01.029
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Environmental stressors and changes in land use have led to rapid and dramatic species losses. As such, we need effective monitoring programs that alert us not only to biodiversity losses, but also to functional changes in species assemblages and associated ecosystem processes. Ants are important components of terrestrial food webs and a key group in food web interactions and numerous ecosystem processes. Their sensitive and rapid response to environmental changes suggests that they are a suitable indicator group for the monitoring of abiotic, biotic, and functional changes. We tested the suitability of the incidence (i.e. the sum of all species occurrences at 30 baits), species richness, and functional richness of ants as indicators of ecological responses to environmental change, forest degradation, and of the ecosystem process predation on herbivorous arthropods. We sampled data along an elevational gradient (1000-3000m a.s.l.) and across seasons (wetter and drier period) in a montane rainforest in southern Ecuador. The incidence of ants declined with increasing elevation but did not change with forest degradation. Ant incidence was higher during the drier season. Species richness was highly correlated with incidence and showed comparable results. Functional richness also declined with increasing elevation and did not change with forest degradation. However, a null-model comparison revealed that the functional richness pattern did not differ from a pattern expected for ant assemblages with randomly distributed sets of traits across species. Predation on artificial caterpillars decreased along the elevational gradient; the pattern was not driven by elevation itself, but by ant incidence (or interchangeable by ant richness), which positively affected predation. In spite of lower ant incidence (or ant richness), predation was higher during the wetter season and did not change with forest degradation and ant functional richness. We used path analysis to disentangle the causal relationships of the environmental factors temperature (with elevation as a proxy), season, and habitat degradation with the incidence and functional richness of ants, and their consequences for predation. Our results would suggest that the forecasted global warming might support more active and species-rich ant assemblages, which in turn would mediate increased predation on herbivorous arthropods. However, this prediction should be made with reservation, as it assumes that the dispersal of ants keeps pace with the climatic changes as well as a one-dimensional relationship between ants and predation within a food-web that comprises species interactions of much higher complexity. Our results also suggested that degraded forests in our study area might provide suitable habitat for epigaeic, ground-dwelling ant assemblages that do not differ in incidence, species richness, functional richness, composition, or predation on arthropods from assemblages of primary forests. Most importantly, our results suggest that the occurrence and activity of ants are important drivers of ecosystem processes and that changes in the incidence and richness of ants can be used as effective indicators of responses to temperature changes and of predation within mega-diverse forest ecosystems. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:527 / 537
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Monitoring environmental change in an ecosystem
    Gamez, M.
    Lopez, I.
    Molnar, S.
    BIOSYSTEMS, 2008, 93 (03) : 211 - 217
  • [2] The sensitivity of ants to environmental change: a preliminary analysis
    Griffin, TT
    OTHER 99%: THE CONSERVATION AND BIODIVERSITY OF INVERTEBRATES, 1999, : 95 - 100
  • [3] ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS OF WESTERN HARVESTER ANTS ON SHORTGRASS PLAINS ECOSYSTEM
    ROGERS, LE
    LAVIGNE, RJ
    ENVIRONMENTAL ENTOMOLOGY, 1974, 3 (06) : 994 - 997
  • [4] Change of support for environmental indicators
    Stein, A
    GEOENV III - GEOSTATISTICS FOR ENVIRONMENTAL APPLICATIONS, 2001, 11 : 393 - 404
  • [5] Can ants be used as indicators of environmental impacts caused by arsenic?
    Ribas, Carla R.
    Solar, Ricardo R. C.
    Campos, Renata B. F.
    Schmidt, Fernando A.
    Valentim, Clarisse L.
    Schoereder, Jose H.
    JOURNAL OF INSECT CONSERVATION, 2012, 16 (03) : 413 - 421
  • [6] Can ants be used as indicators of environmental impacts caused by arsenic?
    Carla R. Ribas
    Ricardo R. C. Solar
    Renata B. F. Campos
    Fernando A. Schmidt
    Clarisse L. Valentim
    José H. Schoereder
    Journal of Insect Conservation, 2012, 16 : 413 - 421
  • [7] Indicators of ecosystem change in north Australian savannas
    Cook, GD
    Andersen, AN
    Churchill, TB
    Ludwig, JA
    Tongway, D
    Williams, RJ
    Woinarski, JCZ
    PEOPLE AND RANGELANDS BUILDING THE FUTURE, VOLS 1 AND 2, 1999, : 124 - 125
  • [8] National indicators for observing ecosystem service change
    Karp, Daniel S.
    Tallis, Heather
    Sachse, Rene
    Halpern, Ben
    Thonicke, Kirsten
    Cramer, Wolfgang
    Mooney, Harold
    Polasky, Stephen
    Tietjen, Britta
    Waha, Katharina
    Walt, Ariane
    Wolny, Stacie
    GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS, 2015, 35 : 12 - 21
  • [9] Ants and plants as indicators of biodiversity, ecosystem services, and conservation value in constructed grasslands
    Peters, Valerie E.
    Campbell, Kaitlin U.
    Dienno, Garrett
    Garcia, Mayrolin
    Leak, Emaly
    Loyke, Christina
    Ogle, Megan
    Steinly, Bruce
    Crist, Thomas O.
    BIODIVERSITY AND CONSERVATION, 2016, 25 (08) : 1481 - 1501
  • [10] Ants and plants as indicators of biodiversity, ecosystem services, and conservation value in constructed grasslands
    Valerie E. Peters
    Kaitlin U. Campbell
    Garrett Dienno
    Mayrolin García
    Emaly Leak
    Christina Loyke
    Megan Ogle
    Bruce Steinly
    Thomas O. Crist
    Biodiversity and Conservation, 2016, 25 : 1481 - 1501