首页> 外文期刊>Acta oecologica >Coexistence, habitat patterns and the assembly is of ant communities in the Yasawa islands, Fiji
【24h】

Coexistence, habitat patterns and the assembly is of ant communities in the Yasawa islands, Fiji

机译:斐济Yasawa群岛的蚂蚁群落共存,栖息地格局和聚集

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
       

摘要

Community assembly rules are important to help understand the dynamics of biological invasions. The coexistence of native and invasive ant species was examined by litter sampling on six remote islands within the Fijian archipelago, in the Pacific Ocean. The composition of ant assemblages of the islands and also of three different habitats across islands was very similar to each other. Estimates of species richness indicated that the sampling effort had generally captured a large proportion of ant species (60-97%). Analysis at two different spatial scales (regional [islands within an archipelago], and local [plots within an island]) and on two null model data sets (co-occurrence and body size), showed that the majority (10 of 12) of assemblages were not different from randomly assembled communities. Habitat type played an important role in the co-occurrence patterns. Scrub and coconut habitats, which are non-native habitats and frequently disturbed (i.e. harsh environments), strongly influenced the assembly of the ant community. However, two invasive species, Pheidole meyacephala and Anoplolepis gracilipes may have also shaped the ant communities through inter-specific competition. These two species excel at both the discovery and domination of resources, and could have 'disassembled' the native ant fauna. Recent surveys and ecological studies from other Pacific islands show that a very similar set of invasive species to the Yasawa islands are ubiquitous throughout the region. Thus, similar patterns of competition, co-occurrence and community organisation that exist in the Yasawa islands could be manifested throughout the Pacific Ocean region. (C) 2007 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.
机译:社区集会规则对于帮助理解生物入侵的动态非常重要。通过在太平洋斐济群岛内的六个偏远岛屿上对垃圾进行采样,检查了原生蚂蚁和入侵蚂蚁物种的共存。岛屿和整个岛屿上三个不同生境的蚂蚁组合的组成彼此非常相似。对物种丰富度的估计表明,采样工作通常捕获了很大比例的蚂蚁物种(60-97%)。在两个不同的空间尺度(区域[群岛内的岛屿]和局部[岛内的岛屿])以及两个空模型数据集(同时出现和体型)上的分析表明,大多数(12个中的10个)聚集与随机聚集的社区没有不同。栖息地类型在共现模式中起重要作用。灌木丛和椰子栖息地是非本地栖息地,经常受到干扰(即恶劣的环境),极大地影响了蚂蚁群落的组装。然而,两个入侵物种,Pheidole meyacephala和Anoplolepis gracilipes也可能通过种间竞争形成了蚂蚁群落。这两个物种在发现资源和控制资源方面都表现出色,并且可能“分解”了当地的蚂蚁动物。来自其他太平洋岛屿的最新调查和生态研究表明,与Yasawa岛屿非常相似的一组入侵物种在整个区域无处不在。因此,在亚萨瓦群岛上存在着类似的竞争,共生和社区组织模式,在整个太平洋地区都可以得到体现。 (C)2007 Elsevier Masson SAS。版权所有。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号