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Variation in (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) functional morphology across urban parks. | LitMetric

Variation in (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) functional morphology across urban parks.

PeerJ

Key Laboratory of Southwest China Wildlife Resources Conservation (Ministry of Education), China West Normal University, Nanchong, China.

Published: July 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Habitat fragmentation in urban areas creates selection pressures on ant populations, leading to significant morphological differences among individuals found in separate parks.
  • Researchers used pitfall trapping to objectively analyze functional traits and discovered these ants exhibited varying phenotypic traits across urban parks.
  • Findings indicate that habitat degradation in urban landscapes limits phenotypic diversity and alters the morphological characteristics of ant populations, emphasizing a need for further studies on diverse ant taxa to understand their responses to urban segregation.

Article Abstract

Background: Habitat fragmentation and consequent population isolation in urban areas can impose significant selection pressures on individuals and species confined to urban islands, such as parks. Despite many comparative studies on the diversity and structure of ant community living in urban areas, studies on ants' responses to these highly variable ecosystems are often based on assemblage composition and interspecific mean trait values, which ignore the potential for high intraspecific functional trait variation among individuals.

Methods: Here, we examined differences in functional traits among populations of the generalist ant fragmented between urban parks. We used pitfall trapping, which is more random and objective than sampling colonies directly, despite a trade-off against sample size. We then tested whether trait-filtering could explain phenotypic differences among urban park ant populations, and whether ant populations in different parks exhibited different phenotypic optima, leading to positional shifts in anatomical morphospace through the regional ant meta-population.

Results: Intraspecific morphological differentiation was evident across this urban region. Populations had different convex hull volumes, positioned differently over the morphospace.

Conclusions: Fragmentation and habitat degradation reduced phenotypic diversity and, ultimately, changed the morphological optima of populations in this urban landscape. Considering ants' broad taxonomic and functional diversity and their important role in ecosystems, further work over a variety of ant taxa is necessary to ascertain those varied morphological response pathways operating in response to population segregation in urban environments.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10361077PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.15679DOI Listing

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