The population dynamics of the yellow crazy ant Anoplolepis gracilipes (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) on a tropical island in Malaysia

The yellow crazy ant (Anoplolepis gracilipes) is a widespread tropical invasive species that causes ecological damage in introduced habitats; their negative impacts are especially prominent on island ecosystems. We examined abiotic and biotic effects on a tropical island (Lang Tengah Island on the E...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecological entomology 2022-06, Vol.47 (3), p.339-346
Hauptverfasser: Gan, Jason Yew Seng, Pathy, Taneswarry Sethu, Yeo, Deniece Yin Chia, Lee, Jin Min, Yek, Sze Huei
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container_end_page 346
container_issue 3
container_start_page 339
container_title Ecological entomology
container_volume 47
creator Gan, Jason Yew Seng
Pathy, Taneswarry Sethu
Yeo, Deniece Yin Chia
Lee, Jin Min
Yek, Sze Huei
description The yellow crazy ant (Anoplolepis gracilipes) is a widespread tropical invasive species that causes ecological damage in introduced habitats; their negative impacts are especially prominent on island ecosystems. We examined abiotic and biotic effects on a tropical island (Lang Tengah Island on the East Coast of Malaysia) that experiences annual monsoonal disturbance and hosts two distinct populations of yellow crazy ants. To understand how biotic factors affect A. gracilipes, we conducted ant‐ant interaction bioassays to examine the extent of aggression levels between populations. We tested the abiotic monsoonal rain effect by employing passive (pitfall traps) and active (quantifying ground foragers on marker crossings) sampling, across pre‐and post‐monsoon. The two populations of A. gracilipes exhibited aggression toward each other. Furthermore, the onset of monsoonal rains reduced A. gracilipes abundance and foraging activity. Our findings suggest that A. gracilipes populations are sensitive to monsoonal rains and long‐term population fluctuation data are urgently needed to examine the effect of monsoonal rains on this invasive ant's expansion dynamics on island ecosystems. The two populations of A. gracilipes on Lang Tengah Island exhibited aggression toward each other. The onset of monsoonal rains reduced A. gracilipes abundance and foraging activity. A. gracilipes populations on this island are sensitive to monsoonal rains and experience population fluctuation.
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We examined abiotic and biotic effects on a tropical island (Lang Tengah Island on the East Coast of Malaysia) that experiences annual monsoonal disturbance and hosts two distinct populations of yellow crazy ants. To understand how biotic factors affect A. gracilipes, we conducted ant‐ant interaction bioassays to examine the extent of aggression levels between populations. We tested the abiotic monsoonal rain effect by employing passive (pitfall traps) and active (quantifying ground foragers on marker crossings) sampling, across pre‐and post‐monsoon. The two populations of A. gracilipes exhibited aggression toward each other. Furthermore, the onset of monsoonal rains reduced A. gracilipes abundance and foraging activity. Our findings suggest that A. gracilipes populations are sensitive to monsoonal rains and long‐term population fluctuation data are urgently needed to examine the effect of monsoonal rains on this invasive ant's expansion dynamics on island ecosystems. The two populations of A. gracilipes on Lang Tengah Island exhibited aggression toward each other. The onset of monsoonal rains reduced A. gracilipes abundance and foraging activity. 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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Aggression
Aggressive behavior
Anoplolepis gracilipes
Bioassays
Biotic factors
Ecological effects
Ecosystems
Foraging behavior
Foraging habitats
Impact damage
Introduced species
invasive ant
Invasive species
island ecosystem
Pitfall traps
Population dynamics
Populations
title The population dynamics of the yellow crazy ant Anoplolepis gracilipes (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) on a tropical island in Malaysia
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