Ants biting amphibians: A review and new observations

Antagonistic interactions between insects and amphibians are the subject of many scientific articles, mostly concerning amphibian predation on insect, but many fewer examples exist of the opposite situation. In this article we review available information from the literature and add our own observa...

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Main Authors: Mikołaj Kaczmarski, Michał Michlewicz, Piotr Tryjanowsk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2019-12-01
Series:European Journal of Ecology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.ku.edu/EuroJEcol/article/view/13411
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spelling doaj-64c5e80df0e14f1389821b1edd89b3aa2021-02-10T21:46:42ZengSciendoEuropean Journal of Ecology1339-84742019-12-015210.2478/eje-2019-0018Ants biting amphibians: A review and new observationsMikołaj Kaczmarski0 Michał Michlewicz1Piotr Tryjanowsk2Institute of Zoology, PoznańInstitute of Zoology, PoznańInstitute of Zoology, Poznań Antagonistic interactions between insects and amphibians are the subject of many scientific articles, mostly concerning amphibian predation on insect, but many fewer examples exist of the opposite situation. In this article we review available information from the literature and add our own observations collected during amphibian pitfall trap monitoring in 2012–2016 in Western Poland, as well as discuss potential conservation implications of observed behavior. We identified a total of 29 cases involving 94 individual ants attacking four species of Anura, Rana temporaria, Pelophylax esculentus complex, Bufo bufo, and Pelobates fuscus, and biting their back, cloaca, armpits, or hind legs. Bites were inflicted by three ant species: Myrmica rubra, Lasius fuliginosus, and Formica polyctena. The number of ants found on an amphibian was positively and significantly correlated with its body length. To date, direct damage by ants on amphibians was reported mainly from the tropics in general predation accident. However, as we document here, it is probably a more common phenomenon, especially in some ecological traps or during pitfall trapping, which is a common method to mitigate road mortality of frogs and toads. https://journals.ku.edu/EuroJEcol/article/view/13411Anuradrift fencesFormicidaefrogsinteractiontoads
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mikołaj Kaczmarski
Michał Michlewicz
Piotr Tryjanowsk
spellingShingle Mikołaj Kaczmarski
Michał Michlewicz
Piotr Tryjanowsk
Ants biting amphibians: A review and new observations
European Journal of Ecology
Anura
drift fences
Formicidae
frogs
interaction
toads
author_facet Mikołaj Kaczmarski
Michał Michlewicz
Piotr Tryjanowsk
author_sort Mikołaj Kaczmarski
title Ants biting amphibians: A review and new observations
title_short Ants biting amphibians: A review and new observations
title_full Ants biting amphibians: A review and new observations
title_fullStr Ants biting amphibians: A review and new observations
title_full_unstemmed Ants biting amphibians: A review and new observations
title_sort ants biting amphibians: a review and new observations
publisher Sciendo
series European Journal of Ecology
issn 1339-8474
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Antagonistic interactions between insects and amphibians are the subject of many scientific articles, mostly concerning amphibian predation on insect, but many fewer examples exist of the opposite situation. In this article we review available information from the literature and add our own observations collected during amphibian pitfall trap monitoring in 2012–2016 in Western Poland, as well as discuss potential conservation implications of observed behavior. We identified a total of 29 cases involving 94 individual ants attacking four species of Anura, Rana temporaria, Pelophylax esculentus complex, Bufo bufo, and Pelobates fuscus, and biting their back, cloaca, armpits, or hind legs. Bites were inflicted by three ant species: Myrmica rubra, Lasius fuliginosus, and Formica polyctena. The number of ants found on an amphibian was positively and significantly correlated with its body length. To date, direct damage by ants on amphibians was reported mainly from the tropics in general predation accident. However, as we document here, it is probably a more common phenomenon, especially in some ecological traps or during pitfall trapping, which is a common method to mitigate road mortality of frogs and toads.
topic Anura
drift fences
Formicidae
frogs
interaction
toads
url https://journals.ku.edu/EuroJEcol/article/view/13411
work_keys_str_mv AT mikołajkaczmarski antsbitingamphibiansareviewandnewobservations
AT michałmichlewicz antsbitingamphibiansareviewandnewobservations
AT piotrtryjanowsk antsbitingamphibiansareviewandnewobservations
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