Community Structure of Leaf-Litter Ants in a Neotropical Dry Forest: A Biogeographic Approach to Explain Betadiversity

This paper describes habitat and geographic correlates of ant diversity in Serra da Bodoquena, a poorly surveyed region of central-western Brazil. We discuss leaf-litter ant diversity on a regional scale, with emphasis on the contribution of each of the processes that form the evolutionary basis of...

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Main Authors: Rogério Silvestre, Manoel F. Demétrio, Jacques H. C. Delabie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2012-01-01
Series:Psyche: A Journal of Entomology
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/306925
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spelling doaj-fe3ed99564b447a6b091c61f51b737702020-11-25T02:21:03ZengHindawi LimitedPsyche: A Journal of Entomology0033-26151687-74382012-01-01201210.1155/2012/306925306925Community Structure of Leaf-Litter Ants in a Neotropical Dry Forest: A Biogeographic Approach to Explain BetadiversityRogério Silvestre0Manoel F. Demétrio1Jacques H. C. Delabie2Laboratório de Ecologia de Hymenoptera (HECOLAB), Universidade Federal da Grande Dourados, Rodovia Dourados, Itahum, km 12, Cidade Universitária, 79.804-970 Dourados, MS, BrazilPrograma de Pós-Graduação em Entomologia e Conservação da Biodiversidade, Universidade Federal da Grande Dourados (UFGD), Cidade Universitária, 79.804-970 Dourados, MS, BrazilLaboratório de Mirmecologia, Centro de Pesquisas do Cacau, Convênio UESC/CEPLAC, 45.651-630 Ilhéus, BA, BrazilThis paper describes habitat and geographic correlates of ant diversity in Serra da Bodoquena, a poorly surveyed region of central-western Brazil. We discuss leaf-litter ant diversity on a regional scale, with emphasis on the contribution of each of the processes that form the evolutionary basis of contemporary beta diversity. The diversity of leaf-litter ants was assessed from a series of 262 Winkler samples conducted in two microbasins within a deciduous forest domain. A total of 170 litter-dwelling ant species in 45 genera and 11 subfamilies was identified. The data showed that the study areas exhibited different arrangements of ant fauna, with a high turnover in species composition between sites, indicating high beta diversity. Our analysis suggests that the biogeographic history of this tropical dry forest in the centre of South America could explain ant assemblage structure more than competitive dominance. The co-occurrence analysis showed that species co-occur less often than expected by chance in only two of the localities, suggesting that, for most of the species, co-occurrences are random. The assessment of the structure of the diversity of litter-dwelling ants is the first step in understanding the beta diversity patterns in this region of great biogeographic importance.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/306925
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rogério Silvestre
Manoel F. Demétrio
Jacques H. C. Delabie
spellingShingle Rogério Silvestre
Manoel F. Demétrio
Jacques H. C. Delabie
Community Structure of Leaf-Litter Ants in a Neotropical Dry Forest: A Biogeographic Approach to Explain Betadiversity
Psyche: A Journal of Entomology
author_facet Rogério Silvestre
Manoel F. Demétrio
Jacques H. C. Delabie
author_sort Rogério Silvestre
title Community Structure of Leaf-Litter Ants in a Neotropical Dry Forest: A Biogeographic Approach to Explain Betadiversity
title_short Community Structure of Leaf-Litter Ants in a Neotropical Dry Forest: A Biogeographic Approach to Explain Betadiversity
title_full Community Structure of Leaf-Litter Ants in a Neotropical Dry Forest: A Biogeographic Approach to Explain Betadiversity
title_fullStr Community Structure of Leaf-Litter Ants in a Neotropical Dry Forest: A Biogeographic Approach to Explain Betadiversity
title_full_unstemmed Community Structure of Leaf-Litter Ants in a Neotropical Dry Forest: A Biogeographic Approach to Explain Betadiversity
title_sort community structure of leaf-litter ants in a neotropical dry forest: a biogeographic approach to explain betadiversity
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Psyche: A Journal of Entomology
issn 0033-2615
1687-7438
publishDate 2012-01-01
description This paper describes habitat and geographic correlates of ant diversity in Serra da Bodoquena, a poorly surveyed region of central-western Brazil. We discuss leaf-litter ant diversity on a regional scale, with emphasis on the contribution of each of the processes that form the evolutionary basis of contemporary beta diversity. The diversity of leaf-litter ants was assessed from a series of 262 Winkler samples conducted in two microbasins within a deciduous forest domain. A total of 170 litter-dwelling ant species in 45 genera and 11 subfamilies was identified. The data showed that the study areas exhibited different arrangements of ant fauna, with a high turnover in species composition between sites, indicating high beta diversity. Our analysis suggests that the biogeographic history of this tropical dry forest in the centre of South America could explain ant assemblage structure more than competitive dominance. The co-occurrence analysis showed that species co-occur less often than expected by chance in only two of the localities, suggesting that, for most of the species, co-occurrences are random. The assessment of the structure of the diversity of litter-dwelling ants is the first step in understanding the beta diversity patterns in this region of great biogeographic importance.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2012/306925
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