Bottom-up control and co-occurrence in complex communities: honeydew and nectar determine a rainforest ant mosaic
Authors: Nico Blüthgen; Nigel E. Stork; Konrad Fiedler
Source: Oikos, Volume 106, Number 2, August 2004 , pp. 344-358(15)
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
Abstract:
Complex distribution patterns of species-rich insect communities in tropical rainforests have been intensively studied, and yet we know very little about processes that generate these patterns. We provide evidence for the key role of homopteran honeydew and plant nectar in structuring ant communities in an Australian tropical rainforest canopy and understorey. We also test the ant visitation of these resources against predictions derived from the ant-mosaic hypothesis. Two ant species were highly dominant in terms of territorial behaviour and abundance: Oecophyllasmaragdina and Anonychomyrma gilberti. Both dominant ant species monopolised large aggregations of honeydew-producing homopterans. Attended homopteran species were highly segregated between these two ant species. For the use of extrafloral and floral nectar (involving 43 ant species on 48 plant species), partitioning of ant species among plant species and between canopy and understorey was also significant, but less pronounced. In contrast to trophobioses, simultaneous co-occurrence of different nectar foraging ant species on the same plant individuals was frequent (23% of all surveys). While both dominant ant species were mutually exclusive on honeydew and nectar sources, co-occurrence with non-dominant ant species on nectaries was common. The proportion of visits with co-occurrences was low for dominant ants and high for many sub-ordinate species. These findings support the ant mosaic theory. The differential role of honeydew (as a specialised resource for dominant ants) and nectar (as an opportunistic resource for all ants including the co-occurring non-dominant species) provides a plausible structuring mechanism for the Australian canopy ant community studied.Document Type: Research article
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.0030-1299.2004.12687.x
Publication date: 2004-08-01
- In this: publication
- By this: publisher
- In this Subject: Ecology
- By this author: Nico Blüthgen ; Nigel E. Stork ; Konrad Fiedler

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