Ants and the enigmatic Namibian fairy circles - cause and effect?
1. Parts of the Namibian landscape show extensive surface perturbation in the form of long‐lived, yet dynamic ‘fairy circles'. While exerting profound ecological effects on 7.3% of the land surface, the origin and nature of these large bare discs embedded in an arid grassland matrix remains unr...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Ecological entomology 2012-02, Vol.37 (1), p.33-42 |
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. Parts of the Namibian landscape show extensive surface perturbation in the form of long‐lived, yet dynamic ‘fairy circles'. While exerting profound ecological effects on 7.3% of the land surface, the origin and nature of these large bare discs embedded in an arid grassland matrix remains unresolved.
2. We found no evidence to support the current hypothesis of a termite origin for fairy circles but instead observed a strong spatial association between fairy circles and large nests of the ant Black pugnacious ant
Anoplolepis steingroeveri
Forel, with much higher ant abundances on the circles compared with the matrix.
3. Aggression trials showed that different colonies of
A. steingroeveri
were located on different circles, and that the species was polydomous.
4. Fairy circles and
Pogonomyrmex
ant nests both have a bare disc surrounding the nest, are overdispersed (evenly spaced), and are associated with elevated soil moisture. Fairy circle soils exhibited a five‐fold increase in soil moisture when compared with the matrix.
5. Senescent
Stipagrostis obtusa
(Delile) Nees seedlings were only observed on the circles and not in the matrix, and were found to have a reduction in both root length and number of roots.
6.
Anoplolepis steingroeveri
excavated the root system of both
S. obtusa
seedlings on the disc and
Stipagrostis ciliata
(Desf.) de Winter grasses on the perimeter of the circles, where they tended honeydew‐secreting Meenoplidae bugs that fed on grass roots and culms. The bugs occurred almost exclusively on grasses associated with the circles. This ant–bug interaction is a possible mechanism for the observed reduction in root length and number of senescent grass seedlings on the circles. |
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ISSN: | 0307-6946 1365-2311 |
DOI: | 10.1111/j.1365-2311.2011.01332.x |