AI Article Synopsis

  • Ecologists investigate how multiple ant species can coexist in competitive environments, especially in species-rich communities.
  • Through experiments in eastern North America, researchers found limited evidence for typical coexistence mechanisms, such as competition over resources or niche partitioning.
  • However, they discovered that while dominant ant species forage more at night, subdominant species peak during the day, indicating that temporal segregation may help facilitate coexistence among ant species.

Article Abstract

Ecologists have long sought to explain the coexistence of multiple potentially competing species in local assemblages. This is especially challenging in species-rich assemblages in which interspecific competition is intense, as it often is in ant assemblages. As a result, a suite of mechanisms has been proposed to explain coexistence among potentially competing ant species: the dominance-discovery tradeoff, the dominance-thermal tolerance tradeoff, spatial segregation, temperature-based niche partitioning, and temporal niche partitioning. Through a series of observations and experiments, we examined a deciduous forest ant assemblage in eastern North America for the signature of each of these coexistence mechanisms. We failed to detect evidence for any of the commonly suggested mechanisms of coexistence, with one notable exception: ant species appear to temporally partition foraging times such that behaviourally dominant species foraged more intensely at night, while foraging by subdominant species peaked during the day. Our work, though focused on a single assemblage, indicates that many of the commonly cited mechanisms of coexistence may not be general to all ant assemblages. However, temporal segregation may play a role in promoting coexistence among ant species in at least some ecosystems, as it does in many other organisms.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00442-012-2459-9DOI Listing

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