Diversity, Biogeography and Community Ecology of Ants

Andersen, Alan N.

Diversity, Biogeography and Community Ecology of Ants - Basel MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2022 - 1 electronic resource (370 p.)

Open Access

Ants are a ubiquitous, highly diverse, and ecologically dominant faunal group. They represent a large proportion of global terrestrial faunal biomass and play key ecological roles as soil engineers, predators, and re-cyclers of nutrients. They have particularly important interactions with plants as defenders against herbivores, as seed dispersers, and as seed predators. One downside to the ecological importance of ants is that they feature on the list of the world's worst invasive species. Ants have also been important for science as model organisms for studies of diversity, biogeography, and community ecology. Despite such importance, ants remain remarkably understudied. A large proportion of species are undescribed, the biogeographic histories of most taxa remain poorly known, and we have a limited understanding of spatial patterns of diversity and composition, along with the processes driving them. The papers in this Special Issue collectively address many of the most pressing questions relating to ant diversity. What is the level of ant diversity? What is the origin of this diversity, and how is it distributed at different spatial scales? What are the roles of niche partitioning and competition as regulators of local diversity? How do ants affect the ecosystems within which they occur? The answers to these questions provide valuable insights not just for ants, but for biodiversity more generally.


Creative Commons


English

books978-3-0365-2787-1 9783036527864 9783036527871

10.3390/books978-3-0365-2787-1 doi


Research & information: general

ant diversity cryptic species morphospecies species delimitation sympatric association endosymbiont ant vertical transmission biogeography ancestral state reconstruction phylogeny ants community structure physiology interactions temperature behavioral interactions coexistence co-occurrence competitive exclusion dominance Formicidae scale Dolichoderinae species distribution models climatic gradients wet tropics climate change invasion ecology invasive species red imported fire ant commensalism gopher tortoise diversity conservation burrow commensal soil arthropods pitfall bait turnover food specialisation stratification sampling methods hypogaeic species richness species occurrence endemic species distribution ranges dispersal routes centre of origin refugium areas antbird army ant biodiversity biological indicator deforestation habitat fragmentation myrmecophiles mimicry species interactions tropics biological invasions species checklist urban ecology n/a

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