Tree diversity promotes predator but not omnivore ants in a subtropical Chinese forest

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Authors

1. Epigeic ants are functionally important arthropods in tropical and subtropical forests, particularly by acting as predators. High predation pressure has been hypothesised to be a mechanism facilitating high diversity across trophic levels.

2. In this study, standardised pitfall traps were used in a highly diverse subtropical forest to test if and how ant species richness is related to tree species richness and a comprehensive set of other environmental variables such as successional age, soil properties or elevation.

3. A total of 13 441 ant individuals belonging to 3839 species occurrences and 71 species were collected, of which 26 species were exclusive predators and 45 species were omnivores.

4. Occurrence and species richness of total and omnivore ants were positively related to soil pH. Predator ant occurrence was unrelated to all environmental variables tested.

5. The species richness of predator ants increased with tree species richness but decreased with leaf functional diversity and shrub cover. Elevation negatively influenced only total ant species richness.

6. The evenness of predators increased with tree species richness, while the evenness of all ants decreased with shrub cover. Omnivore ant evenness decreased with tree evenness, but increased with successional age.

7. The results highlight the value of diverse forests in maintaining species richness and community evenness of a functionally important predator group. Moreover, the results stress the importance of analysing trophic groups separately when investigating biodiversity effects
OriginalspracheEnglisch
ZeitschriftEcological Entomology
Jahrgang39
Ausgabenummer5
Seiten (von - bis)637-647
Anzahl der Seiten11
ISSN0307-6946
DOIs
PublikationsstatusErschienen - 10.2014

Bibliographische Notiz

Publisher Copyright:
© 2014 The Royal Entomological Society.

DOI

Zuletzt angesehen

Forschende

  1. Kerstin Brockelmann

Publikationen

  1. Leading digital innovation in schools
  2. Verbund-Simulation - Strategic Planning and Optimization of Integrated Production Networks
  3. Governance approaches to address scale issues in biodiversity management – current situation and ways forward
  4. Knowledge on global environmental change within social praxis: what do we know?
  5. Performanceorientiertes Controlling
  6. Boosting and sustaining passion
  7. Does Gender diversity in the audit committee influence key audit matters’ readability in the audit report?
  8. Meta-analytic cointegrating rank tests for dependent panels
  9. Levels of indicator development for education for sustainable development
  10. "Das Zeugnis Jesu"
  11. What a difference a Y makes
  12. Decentralized utilization of wasted organic material in urban areas
  13. 3D characterization of beta-phases in AZ91D by synchrotron-radiation based microtomography
  14. Towards Ecosystems for Responsible AI
  15. MindMatters
  16. Activity-based working
  17. Sustainability Accounting and Reporting: Development, Linkages and Reflection
  18. Borders
  19. Impact of audit committees with independent financial experts on accounting quality
  20. An Appealing Option?
  21. Competition response of European beech Fagus sylvatica L. varies with tree size and abiotic stress
  22. Automatic imitation
  23. "Der nur scheinbare Notfall"
  24. Accelerators and organization studies: An introduction
  25. Strategies in Sustainable Supply Chain Management
  26. The temporal factor of change in stressor-strain relationships
  27. Examining the effect of principal turnover on teaching quality
  28. Media reporting and business cycles

Presse / Medien

  1. Botschafter der Wirtschaft