Competition can lead to unexpected patterns in tropical ant communities

Tom, M. Fayle and M.D. Farnon Ellwood and Nico Blüthgen and William A. Foster and Florian Menzel (2016) Competition can lead to unexpected patterns in tropical ant communities. Acta Oecologica, 75. pp. 24-34. ISSN 1146-609X

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Abstract

Ecological communities are structured by competitive, predatory, mutualistic and parasitic interactions combined with chance events. Separating deterministic from stochastic processes is possible, but finding statistical evidence for specific biological interactions is challenging. We attempt to solve this problem for ant communities nesting in epiphytic bird’s nest ferns (Asplenium nidus) in Borneo’s lowland rainforest. By recording the frequencies with which each and every single ant species occurred together, we were able to test statistically for patterns associated with interspecific competition. We found evidence for competition, but the resulting co-occurrence pattern was the opposite of what we expected. Rather than detecting species segregation—the classical hallmark of competition—we found species aggregation. Moreover, our approach of testing individual pairwise interactions mostly revealed spatially positive rather than negative associations. Significant negative interactions were only detected among large ants, and among species of the subfamily Ponerinae. Remarkably, the results from this study, and from a corroborating analysis of ant communities known to be structured by competition, suggest that competition within the ants leads to species aggregation rather than segregation. We believe this unexpected result is linked with the displacement of species following asymmetric competition. We conclude that analysing co-occurrence frequencies across complete species assemblages, separately for each species, and for each unique pairwise combination of species, represents a subtle yet powerful way of detecting structure and compartmentalisation in ecological communities.

Item Type: Article
Keyword: Ant mosaics, Assembly rules, Competitive exclusion, Community assembly, Co-occurrence patterns, Limiting similarity
Subjects: Q Science > QH Natural history > QH301-705.5 Biology (General)
Department: INSTITUTE > Institute for Tropical Biology and Conservation
Depositing User: ADMIN ADMIN
Date Deposited: 15 Nov 2016 14:59
Last Modified: 30 Nov 2020 10:25
URI: https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/14803

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