Grazing by large savanna herbivores indirectly alters ant diversity and promotes resource monopolisation

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Authors

Purdon, Jean
Parr, Catherine Lucy
Somers, Michael J.

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PeerJ

Abstract

In savannas, grazing is an important disturbance that modifies the grass layer structure and composition. Habitat structural complexity influences species diversity and assemblage functioning. By using a combination of natural sites and manipulated experiments, we explored how habitat structure (grazing lawns and adjacent bunch grass) affects ant diversity and foraging behaviour, specifically the efficiency of resource acquisition, resource monopolisation and ant body size. We found that in the natural sites there was no difference in the amount of time ants took to locate resources, but in the manipulated experiments, ants were faster at locating resources and were more abundant in the simple treatments than in the more complex treatments. Ant body size was only affected by the manipulated experiments, with smaller ants found in the more complex treatments. In both the grazing lawn and bunch grass habitats there were differences in assemblage patterns of ants discovering resources and those dominating them. Seasonality, which was predicted to affect the speed at which ants discovered resources and the intensity of resource monopolisation, also played a role. We show that ants in winter monopolised more baits and discovered resources at a slower rate, but only at certain times within the experiment. Grazing in conjunction with season thus had a significant effect on ant diversity and foraging behaviour, with dominant ants promoted where habitat complexity was simplified when temperatures were low. Our results indicate that structural complexity plays a major role in determining ant assemblage structure and function in African savannas.

Description

Supplemental Information 1: Raw Data for the discovery, dominance and monopolisation of baits by ants in the manipulated and natural experiments. It also includes data on ant assemblages from the pitfall traps and the sizes of ants found in both the experimental and natural experime.
Supplemental Information 2: A Visual representation of the manipulated experiments

Keywords

Biodiversity, Conservation Biology, Ecology, Entomology, Zoology, Ants, Grazing lawns, Bunch grass, Resource monopolisation, Competitive interactions, Assemblages, Body size, Herbivory

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Citation

Purdon J, Parr CL, Somers MJ. 2019. Grazing by large savanna herbivores indirectly alters ant diversity and promotes resource monopolisation. PeerJ 7:e6226 https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.6226.