In tropical ecosystems, ants represent a substantial portion of the animal biomass and contribute to various ecosystem services, including pest regulation and pollination. Dominant ant species are known to determine the structure of ant communities by interfering in the foraging of other ant species. Using bait and pitfall trapping experiments, we performed a pattern analysis at a fine spatial scale of an ant community in a very simplified and homogeneous agroecosystem, that is, a single-crop banana field in Martinique (French West Indies). We found that the community structure was driven by three dominant species (, , and ) and two subdominant species ( and ). Our results showed that dominant and subdominant species generally maintained numerical dominance at baits across time, although , , and displayed better abilities to maintain dominance than and . Almost all interspecific correlations between species abundances, except those between and , were symmetrically negative, suggesting that interference competition prevails in this ground-dwelling ant community. However, we observed variations in the diurnal and nocturnal foraging activity and in the daily occurrence at baits, which may mitigate the effect of interference competition through the induction of spatial and temporal niche partitioning. This may explain the coexistence of dominant, subdominant, and subordinate species in this very simplified agroecosystem, limited in habitat structure and diversity.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5167050 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ece3.2570 | DOI Listing |
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