Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/14730
Título: Asymmetric dispersal and colonization success of amazonian plant-ants queens
Autor: Bruna, Emilio M.
Izzo, Thiago Junqueira
Inouye, Brian D.
Uríarte, Ma?ia
Vasconcelos, Heraldo L.
Palavras-chave: Ant
Arthropod
Azteca
Body Size
Colony Formation
Controlled Study
Crematogaster Laevis
Environmental Recolonization
Forelimb
Nonhuman
Pheidole Minutula
Plant Insect Interaction
Quantitative Study
Queen (insect)
Seed Dispersal
Seed Kernel
Species Difference
Animals
Ant
Physiology
Plant
Seedling
Symbiosis
Azteca
Crematogaster Laevis
Formicidae
Pheidole Minutula
Animalss
Ants
Plants
Seedling
Symbiosis
Data do documento: 2011
Revista: PLoS ONE
É parte de: Volume 6, Número 8
Abstract: Background: The dispersal ability of queens is central to understanding ant life-history evolution, and plays a fundamental role in ant population and community dynamics, the maintenance of genetic diversity, and the spread of invasive ants. In tropical ecosystems, species from over 40 genera of ants establish colonies in the stems, hollow thorns, or leaf pouches of specialized plants. However, little is known about the relative dispersal ability of queens competing for access to the same host plants. Methodology/Principal Findings: We used empirical data and inverse modeling-a technique developed by plant ecologists to model seed dispersal-to quantify and compare the dispersal kernels of queens from three Amazonian ant species that compete for access to host-plants. We found that the modal colonization distance of queens varied 8-fold, with the generalist ant species (Crematogaster laevis) having a greater modal distance than two specialists (Pheidole minutula, Azteca sp.) that use the same host-plants. However, our results also suggest that queens of Azteca sp. have maximal distances that are four-sixteen times greater than those of its competitors. Conclusions/Significance: We found large differences between ant species in both the modal and maximal distance ant queens disperse to find vacant seedlings used to found new colonies. These differences could result from interspecific differences in queen body size, and hence wing musculature, or because queens differ in their ability to identify potential host plants while in flight. Our results provide support for one of the necessary conditions underlying several of the hypothesized mechanisms promoting coexistence in tropical plant-ants. They also suggest that for some ant species limited dispersal capability could pose a significant barrier to the rescue of populations in isolated forest fragments. Finally, we demonstrate that inverse models parameterized with field data are an excellent means of quantifying the dispersal of ant queens. © 2011 Bruna et al.
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0022937
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