Availability of food and nesting-sites as regulatory mechanisms for the recovery of ant diversity after fire disturbance

Nest-site is an important resource for cavity-nesting ants, what limits colony establishment and structures ant community composition through competition. In ecosystems frequently disturbed by firecontinuous establishment of new colonies is crucial to the process of natural succession.  Based on th...

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Main Authors: Roberth Fagundes Souza, Diego V Anjos, Raquel Carvalho, Kleber Del-Claro
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Estadual de Feira de Santana 2015-04-01
Series:Sociobiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://periodicos.uefs.br/index.php/sociobiology/article/view/653
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spelling doaj-8eccfadc96a14cc1bf9967e8400afa902021-10-04T02:03:24ZengUniversidade Estadual de Feira de SantanaSociobiology0361-65252447-80672015-04-0162110.13102/sociobiology.v62i1.1-9Availability of food and nesting-sites as regulatory mechanisms for the recovery of ant diversity after fire disturbanceRoberth Fagundes Souza0Diego V Anjos1Raquel Carvalho2Kleber Del-Claro3Univrsidade Federal de Ouro pretoUniversidade de São PauloUniversidade federal de Ouro pretoUniversidade Federal de Uberlândia Nest-site is an important resource for cavity-nesting ants, what limits colony establishment and structures ant community composition through competition. In ecosystems frequently disturbed by firecontinuous establishment of new colonies is crucial to the process of natural succession.  Based on this perspective, we tested the hypothesis that fire reduces the amount of cavities for nesting (e.g., hollow branches, dry leaves curled, and galls), with negative impact on ant biodiversity. We searched for natural cavities and added artificial-nests to assess whether the occupancy rate and its consequences for colony growth. We also evaluated the availability of food sources for ants (EFN plants, honeydew-hemipterans and preys). We found that burned areas had less diverse and structurally simple vegetation. The occupation of natural and artificial nests was the same between the areas, but the reduced availability of nesting-sites in the burned area indicates higher limitation after the fire. This effect was even stronger in foliage habitat compared to the ground. In fact, most of the 11 cavity-nesting species found were typically arboreal. Species richness was lower in burned area, possibly due to lower nesting-sites availability, but the abundance was higher, which may be explained by the greater availability of food resources, mainly EFN-bearing plants. The high food availability may also explain the bigger colony size in burned area, since nectar and honeydew boosts colony growth and low richness prevents competition. In summary, our results show that changes in the availability of nesting sites and food resources may be key mechanisms by which fire changes the ant fauna, specifically cavity-nesting ants in the Brazilian Savanna. http://periodicos.uefs.br/index.php/sociobiology/article/view/653limiting resourcesant nestcompetitionCerradoenvironmental disturbance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Roberth Fagundes Souza
Diego V Anjos
Raquel Carvalho
Kleber Del-Claro
spellingShingle Roberth Fagundes Souza
Diego V Anjos
Raquel Carvalho
Kleber Del-Claro
Availability of food and nesting-sites as regulatory mechanisms for the recovery of ant diversity after fire disturbance
Sociobiology
limiting resources
ant nest
competition
Cerrado
environmental disturbance
author_facet Roberth Fagundes Souza
Diego V Anjos
Raquel Carvalho
Kleber Del-Claro
author_sort Roberth Fagundes Souza
title Availability of food and nesting-sites as regulatory mechanisms for the recovery of ant diversity after fire disturbance
title_short Availability of food and nesting-sites as regulatory mechanisms for the recovery of ant diversity after fire disturbance
title_full Availability of food and nesting-sites as regulatory mechanisms for the recovery of ant diversity after fire disturbance
title_fullStr Availability of food and nesting-sites as regulatory mechanisms for the recovery of ant diversity after fire disturbance
title_full_unstemmed Availability of food and nesting-sites as regulatory mechanisms for the recovery of ant diversity after fire disturbance
title_sort availability of food and nesting-sites as regulatory mechanisms for the recovery of ant diversity after fire disturbance
publisher Universidade Estadual de Feira de Santana
series Sociobiology
issn 0361-6525
2447-8067
publishDate 2015-04-01
description Nest-site is an important resource for cavity-nesting ants, what limits colony establishment and structures ant community composition through competition. In ecosystems frequently disturbed by firecontinuous establishment of new colonies is crucial to the process of natural succession.  Based on this perspective, we tested the hypothesis that fire reduces the amount of cavities for nesting (e.g., hollow branches, dry leaves curled, and galls), with negative impact on ant biodiversity. We searched for natural cavities and added artificial-nests to assess whether the occupancy rate and its consequences for colony growth. We also evaluated the availability of food sources for ants (EFN plants, honeydew-hemipterans and preys). We found that burned areas had less diverse and structurally simple vegetation. The occupation of natural and artificial nests was the same between the areas, but the reduced availability of nesting-sites in the burned area indicates higher limitation after the fire. This effect was even stronger in foliage habitat compared to the ground. In fact, most of the 11 cavity-nesting species found were typically arboreal. Species richness was lower in burned area, possibly due to lower nesting-sites availability, but the abundance was higher, which may be explained by the greater availability of food resources, mainly EFN-bearing plants. The high food availability may also explain the bigger colony size in burned area, since nectar and honeydew boosts colony growth and low richness prevents competition. In summary, our results show that changes in the availability of nesting sites and food resources may be key mechanisms by which fire changes the ant fauna, specifically cavity-nesting ants in the Brazilian Savanna.
topic limiting resources
ant nest
competition
Cerrado
environmental disturbance
url http://periodicos.uefs.br/index.php/sociobiology/article/view/653
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