The influence of environmental complexity on the worker morphometry of ant assemblages

The objective of the present study was to test whether environmental complexity influences the morphology of leaf litter worker ants, as predicted by the size-grain hypothesis. We collected data from three types of vegetation (shrubby, shrubby-arboreal, and arboreal) in Restinga da Marambaia, southe...

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Main Author: Jarbas M Queiroz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Estadual de Feira de Santana 2015-04-01
Series:Sociobiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://periodicos.uefs.br/index.php/sociobiology/article/view/456
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spelling doaj-96d75d47fed64caeadee6b20480e04692021-10-04T02:03:45ZengUniversidade Estadual de Feira de SantanaSociobiology0361-65252447-80672015-04-0162110.13102/sociobiology.v62i1.23-27The influence of environmental complexity on the worker morphometry of ant assemblagesJarbas M Queiroz0Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de JaneiroThe objective of the present study was to test whether environmental complexity influences the morphology of leaf litter worker ants, as predicted by the size-grain hypothesis. We collected data from three types of vegetation (shrubby, shrubby-arboreal, and arboreal) in Restinga da Marambaia, southeastern Brazil. The shrubby vegetation had a very superficial leaf litter compared to the other two vegetation types. We measured head width, body length, and femur length of the ants collected in each vegetation type. We used average head width (HW) as a proxy for body size. The shrubby-arboreal and arboreal vegetation types were assumed to represent more rugose environments than the shrubby vegetation. Leg length allometry was observed in each and all vegetation types. We did not find significant differences in body size and allometry of ant assemblage among vegetation types. Hence, the size-grain hypothesis was corroborated only for leg allometry, but it did not predict a general environmental influence on ant morphometry.http://periodicos.uefs.br/index.php/sociobiology/article/view/456Size-grain hypothesisenvironmental body sizecomplexityrestinga vegetation.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jarbas M Queiroz
spellingShingle Jarbas M Queiroz
The influence of environmental complexity on the worker morphometry of ant assemblages
Sociobiology
Size-grain hypothesis
environmental body size
complexity
restinga vegetation.
author_facet Jarbas M Queiroz
author_sort Jarbas M Queiroz
title The influence of environmental complexity on the worker morphometry of ant assemblages
title_short The influence of environmental complexity on the worker morphometry of ant assemblages
title_full The influence of environmental complexity on the worker morphometry of ant assemblages
title_fullStr The influence of environmental complexity on the worker morphometry of ant assemblages
title_full_unstemmed The influence of environmental complexity on the worker morphometry of ant assemblages
title_sort influence of environmental complexity on the worker morphometry of ant assemblages
publisher Universidade Estadual de Feira de Santana
series Sociobiology
issn 0361-6525
2447-8067
publishDate 2015-04-01
description The objective of the present study was to test whether environmental complexity influences the morphology of leaf litter worker ants, as predicted by the size-grain hypothesis. We collected data from three types of vegetation (shrubby, shrubby-arboreal, and arboreal) in Restinga da Marambaia, southeastern Brazil. The shrubby vegetation had a very superficial leaf litter compared to the other two vegetation types. We measured head width, body length, and femur length of the ants collected in each vegetation type. We used average head width (HW) as a proxy for body size. The shrubby-arboreal and arboreal vegetation types were assumed to represent more rugose environments than the shrubby vegetation. Leg length allometry was observed in each and all vegetation types. We did not find significant differences in body size and allometry of ant assemblage among vegetation types. Hence, the size-grain hypothesis was corroborated only for leg allometry, but it did not predict a general environmental influence on ant morphometry.
topic Size-grain hypothesis
environmental body size
complexity
restinga vegetation.
url http://periodicos.uefs.br/index.php/sociobiology/article/view/456
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