首页> 外文期刊>Insectes Sociaux: Bulletin de l'Union Internationale pour l'Etude des Insectes Sociaux >Influence of driver ant swarm raids on earthworm prey densities in the Mount Kenya forest: implications for prey population dynamics and colony migrations
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Influence of driver ant swarm raids on earthworm prey densities in the Mount Kenya forest: implications for prey population dynamics and colony migrations

机译:驾驶员蚁群袭击对肯尼亚山森林earth捕食密度的影响:对猎物种群动态和殖民地迁移的影响

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African driver ants are nomadic social mesopredators feeding on a highly diverse array of prey species at different trophic levels. Colonies of certain driver ant species have a biomass which can equal that of medium-sized mammalian carnivores and the ultimate cause of their nomadic life-style is thought to be local prey depletion. The impact of driver ant swarm raids is therefore expected to be strong but the degree to which they reduce prey populations has not been quantified and it is unknown whether these spectacular predators exert significant top-down effects. We examined the combined effect of driver ant (Dorylus molestus) and swarm-attending bird (Alethe poliocephala) predation on the population dynamics of earthworms, which constitute the ants' main prey type in the montane forest of Mount Kenya. Pre-raid earthworm biomass densities in the soil layer down to a depth of 8 cm varied by a factor of 31. The immediate effect of swarm raids was a reduction in earthworm numbers in this layer, but 8 days later earthworm numbers had recovered to pre-raid levels. When earthworm biomass densities were compared, no significant effect of swarm raids was detected. The estimated proportion of earthworm prey biomass extracted from 0 to 8 cm layer by driver ants and birds together was about 2.2%. Although colony distribution was overdispersed as expected based on knowledge of D. molestus migratory behaviour, predation events were highly localized. Predation frequency was low (once every 62 days on average) and highly variable. These results indicate that earthworm prey is highly abundant but at the same time so difficult to harvest that swarm raids exert only a marginal influence on earthworm populations. Longer-term studies would be required to determine whether earthworm populations are limited by swarm raids. The small impacts of individual raids and rapid recovery of earthworm prey populations likely underlie the low frequency of migrations and short distances travelled by migrating colonies of D. molestus.
机译:非洲驾驶员蚂蚁是游牧社会的中毒者,以不同营养级别的猎物为食。某些驱动蚂蚁物种的殖民地生物量可以等于中型哺乳动物食肉动物的生物量,其游牧生活方式的最终原因被认为是当地猎物的消耗。因此,预计驾驶员蚁群袭击的影响会很强,但尚未量化它们减少猎物种群的程度,并且未知这些壮观的捕食者是否会发挥明显的自上而下的作用。我们研究了驱动蚁(Dorylus molestus)和成群鸟类(Alethe poliocephala)捕食对combined种群动态的综合影响,which是构成肯尼亚山地森林中蚂蚁的主要猎物类型。到8厘米深的土壤层中,突袭前biomass的生物量密度相差31倍。群发袭击的直接影响是该层layer的数量减少,但8天后earth的数量已恢复到-突袭等级。当比较biomass的生物量密度时,没有发现群体袭击的显着影响。估计由驱动蚂蚁和鸟类从0到8 cm层中提取的pre猎物生物量的比例约为2.2%。尽管基于对mole鼠D.迁徙行为的了解,菌落分布如预期般过度分散,但捕食事件高度定位。捕食频率低(平均每62天一次)且变化很大。这些结果表明earth的猎物非常丰富,但同时又很难捕捞,以至于群袭对earth的种群只产生很小的影响。需要进行长期研究,以确定population种群是否受到蜂群袭击的限制。个体袭击的微小影响和worm猎物种群的快速恢复可能是lie鼠迁徙的频率低,迁移距离短的原因。

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