Are ant assemblages of Brazilian veredas characterised by location or habitat type?

Wetland areas in the Brazilian Cerrado, known as “veredas”, represent ecosystems formed on sandy soils with high concentrations of peat, and are responsible for the recharge of aquiferous reservoirs. They are currently under threat by various human activities, most notably the clearing of vegetation...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: CB Costa-Milanez, G Lourenço-Silva, PTA Castro, JD Majer, SP Ribeiro
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Instituto Internacional de Ecologia
Series:Brazilian Journal of Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842014000100012&lng=en&tlng=en
id doaj-be09727c5c31429aac85fe21d7c8d003
record_format Article
spelling doaj-be09727c5c31429aac85fe21d7c8d0032020-11-24T22:31:09ZengInstituto Internacional de EcologiaBrazilian Journal of Biology1678-4375741899910.1590/1519-6984.17612S1519-69842014000100012Are ant assemblages of Brazilian veredas characterised by location or habitat type?CB Costa-MilanezG Lourenço-SilvaPTA CastroJD MajerSP RibeiroWetland areas in the Brazilian Cerrado, known as “veredas”, represent ecosystems formed on sandy soils with high concentrations of peat, and are responsible for the recharge of aquiferous reservoirs. They are currently under threat by various human activities, most notably the clearing of vegetation for Eucalyptus plantations. Despite their ecological importance and high conservation value, little is known about the actual effects of human disturbance on the animal community. To assess how habitat within different veredas, and plantations surrounding them affect ant assemblages, we selected four independent vereda locations, two being impacted by Eucalyptus monoculture (one younger and one mature plantation) and two controls, where the wetland was surrounded by cerrado vegetation. Ant sampling was conducted in May 2010 (dry season) using three complementary methods, namely baits, pitfall traps, and hand collection, in the wetland and in the surrounding habitats. A total of 7,575 ants were sampled, belonging to seven subfamilies, 32 genera and 124 species. Ant species richness and abundance did not differ between vereda locations, but did between the habitats. When impacted by the monoculture, ant species richness and abundance decreased in wetlands, but were less affected in the cerrado habitat. Ant species composition differed between the three habitats and between vereda locations. Eucalyptus plantations had an ant species composition defined by high dominance of Pheidole sp. and Solenopsis invicta, while natural habitats were defined by Camponotus and Crematogaster species. Atta sexdens was strictly confined to native habitats of non-impacted “veredas”. Eucalyptus monocultures require high quantities of water in the early stages, which may have caused a decrease in groundwater level in the wetland, allowing hypogeic ants such as Labidus praedator to colonise this habitat.http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842014000100012&lng=en&tlng=enmesic environmentsbioindicationFormicidaeBrazilian savannaEucalyptus
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author CB Costa-Milanez
G Lourenço-Silva
PTA Castro
JD Majer
SP Ribeiro
spellingShingle CB Costa-Milanez
G Lourenço-Silva
PTA Castro
JD Majer
SP Ribeiro
Are ant assemblages of Brazilian veredas characterised by location or habitat type?
Brazilian Journal of Biology
mesic environments
bioindication
Formicidae
Brazilian savanna
Eucalyptus
author_facet CB Costa-Milanez
G Lourenço-Silva
PTA Castro
JD Majer
SP Ribeiro
author_sort CB Costa-Milanez
title Are ant assemblages of Brazilian veredas characterised by location or habitat type?
title_short Are ant assemblages of Brazilian veredas characterised by location or habitat type?
title_full Are ant assemblages of Brazilian veredas characterised by location or habitat type?
title_fullStr Are ant assemblages of Brazilian veredas characterised by location or habitat type?
title_full_unstemmed Are ant assemblages of Brazilian veredas characterised by location or habitat type?
title_sort are ant assemblages of brazilian veredas characterised by location or habitat type?
publisher Instituto Internacional de Ecologia
series Brazilian Journal of Biology
issn 1678-4375
description Wetland areas in the Brazilian Cerrado, known as “veredas”, represent ecosystems formed on sandy soils with high concentrations of peat, and are responsible for the recharge of aquiferous reservoirs. They are currently under threat by various human activities, most notably the clearing of vegetation for Eucalyptus plantations. Despite their ecological importance and high conservation value, little is known about the actual effects of human disturbance on the animal community. To assess how habitat within different veredas, and plantations surrounding them affect ant assemblages, we selected four independent vereda locations, two being impacted by Eucalyptus monoculture (one younger and one mature plantation) and two controls, where the wetland was surrounded by cerrado vegetation. Ant sampling was conducted in May 2010 (dry season) using three complementary methods, namely baits, pitfall traps, and hand collection, in the wetland and in the surrounding habitats. A total of 7,575 ants were sampled, belonging to seven subfamilies, 32 genera and 124 species. Ant species richness and abundance did not differ between vereda locations, but did between the habitats. When impacted by the monoculture, ant species richness and abundance decreased in wetlands, but were less affected in the cerrado habitat. Ant species composition differed between the three habitats and between vereda locations. Eucalyptus plantations had an ant species composition defined by high dominance of Pheidole sp. and Solenopsis invicta, while natural habitats were defined by Camponotus and Crematogaster species. Atta sexdens was strictly confined to native habitats of non-impacted “veredas”. Eucalyptus monocultures require high quantities of water in the early stages, which may have caused a decrease in groundwater level in the wetland, allowing hypogeic ants such as Labidus praedator to colonise this habitat.
topic mesic environments
bioindication
Formicidae
Brazilian savanna
Eucalyptus
url http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842014000100012&lng=en&tlng=en
work_keys_str_mv AT cbcostamilanez areantassemblagesofbrazilianveredascharacterisedbylocationorhabitattype
AT glourencosilva areantassemblagesofbrazilianveredascharacterisedbylocationorhabitattype
AT ptacastro areantassemblagesofbrazilianveredascharacterisedbylocationorhabitattype
AT jdmajer areantassemblagesofbrazilianveredascharacterisedbylocationorhabitattype
AT spribeiro areantassemblagesofbrazilianveredascharacterisedbylocationorhabitattype
_version_ 1725738485114994688