Diversity, biogeography and community ecology of ants

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...

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Main Author Andersen, Alan N. (Alan Neil)
Format eBook Book
LanguageEnglish
Published Basel MDPI 2022
MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
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Abstract 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.
AbstractList 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.
Author Andersen, Alan N. (Alan Neil)
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Notes "This is a reprint of articles from the special issue published online in the open access journal Diversity (ISSN 1424-2818)" -- T.p. verso
Includes bibliographical references and index
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Snippet Ants are a ubiquitous, highly diverse, and ecologically dominant faunal group. They represent a large proportion of global terrestrial faunal biomass and play...
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SubjectTerms ancestral state reconstruction
ant
ant diversity
antbird
ants
army ant
bait
behavioral interactions
biodiversity
biogeography
biological indicator
biological invasions
burrow commensal
centre of origin
climate change
climatic gradients
co-occurrence
coexistence
commensalism
community structure
competitive exclusion
conservation
cryptic species
deforestation
dispersal routes
distribution ranges
diversity
Dolichoderinae
dominance
endemic species
endosymbiont
food specialisation
Formicidae
gopher tortoise
habitat fragmentation
hypogaeic
interactions
invasion ecology
invasive species
mimicry
morphospecies
myrmecophiles
n/a
phylogeny
physiology
pitfall
red imported fire ant
Reference, Information and Interdisciplinary subjects
refugium areas
Research and information: general
sampling methods
scale
soil arthropods
species checklist
species delimitation
species distribution models
species interactions
species occurrence
species richness
stratification
sympatric association
temperature
tropics
turnover
urban ecology
vertical transmission
wet tropics
Title Diversity, biogeography and community ecology of ants
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