Effect of tropical forest disturbance on the competitive interactions within a diverse ant community

Understanding how anthropogenic disturbance influences patterns of community composition and the reinforcing interactive processes that structure communities is important to mitigate threats to biodiversity. Competition is considered a primary reinforcing process, yet little is known concerning dist...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2018-03, Vol.8 (1), p.5131-12, Article 5131
Hauptverfasser: Gray, Ross E. J., Ewers, Robert M., Boyle, Michael J. W., Chung, Arthur Y. C., Gill, Richard J.
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container_start_page 5131
container_title Scientific reports
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creator Gray, Ross E. J.
Ewers, Robert M.
Boyle, Michael J. W.
Chung, Arthur Y. C.
Gill, Richard J.
description Understanding how anthropogenic disturbance influences patterns of community composition and the reinforcing interactive processes that structure communities is important to mitigate threats to biodiversity. Competition is considered a primary reinforcing process, yet little is known concerning disturbance effects on competitive interaction networks. We examined how differences in ant community composition between undisturbed and disturbed Bornean rainforest, is potentially reflected by changes in competitive interactions over a food resource. Comparing 10 primary forest sites to 10 in selectively-logged forest, we found higher genus richness and diversity in the primary forest, with 18.5% and 13.0% of genera endemic to primary and logged respectively. From 180 hours of filming bait cards, we assessed ant-ant interactions, finding that despite considered aggression over food sources, the majority of ant interactions were neutral. Proportion of competitive interactions at bait cards did not differ between forest type, however, the rate and per capita number of competitive interactions was significantly lower in logged forest. Furthermore, the majority of genera showed large changes in aggression-score with often inverse relationships to their occupancy rank. This provides evidence of a shuffled competitive network, and these unexpected changes in aggressive relationships could be considered a type of competitive network re-wiring after disturbance.
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subjects 631/158/2450
631/158/853
631/158/856
631/601/1466
Aggression
Anthropogenic factors
Baits
Biodiversity
Community composition
Competition
Food resources
Food sources
Humanities and Social Sciences
multidisciplinary
Rainforests
Science
Science (multidisciplinary)
Tropical forests
title Effect of tropical forest disturbance on the competitive interactions within a diverse ant community
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