Effect of high nest density on spatial relationships in two dominant ectatommine ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)

Regular dispersion patterns in the spatial distribution of ant nests are linked to both defense of foraging areas and competition for food. They are frequently observed amongst colonies of conspecifics when the availability of colony foundation sites is homogeneous. In order to evaluate the degree of intraspecific competition in the dominant Neotropical ectatommine ant Ectatomma ruidum and the importance of interactions with another dominant sympatric ectatommine ant, E. tuberculatum, we examined the spatial relationships among colonies of these two species in an area with a naturally very high nest density (up to 11500 and 1500 nests/ha, respectively). Data were analyzed by calculation of the Clark and Evans nearest neighbor index and by statistical comparison of the observed mean distance to the nearest neighbor and a theoretical value obtained by Monte-Carlo simulation. The latter procedure allowed analysis of spatial relationships despite the non-haphazard location of E. tuberculatum nests, which were always found at the base of a tree. Whatever the nest density, the mean distance between nearest neighbor nests ofE. ruidum was always higher than that expected for random distribution. This regular dispersion pattern strongly supports the hypothesis that E. ruidum colonies are monodomous. In the three quadrats where they co-occurred, E. ruidum and E. tuberculatum were independently distributed, suggesting a low level of interaction between them. Even at high colony densities, the dominant character of each of these species does not appear to be incompatible with their co-existence, due to the low degree of niche overlap between them.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Schatz, Bertrand autor/a 15024, Lachaud, Jean Paul Doctor autor/a 2090
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Subjects:Ectatomma ruidum, Ectatomma tuberculatum, Hormigas, Distribución espacial, Competencia interespecífica, Cafetal, Cacaotal, Artfrosur,
Online Access:https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Jean-Paul_Lachaud/publication/230561811_Effect_of_high_nest_density_on_spatial_relationships_in_two_dominant_ectatommine_ants_Hymenoptera_Formicidae/links/0912f5017e9a227670000000/Effect-of-high-nest-density-on-spatial-relationships-in-two-dominant-ectatommine-ants-Hymenoptera-Formicidae.pdf
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id KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:46673
record_format koha
institution ECOSUR
collection Koha
country México
countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
En linea
databasecode cat-ecosur
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Sistema de Información Bibliotecario de ECOSUR (SIBE)
language eng
topic Ectatomma ruidum
Ectatomma tuberculatum
Hormigas
Distribución espacial
Competencia interespecífica
Cafetal
Cacaotal
Artfrosur
Ectatomma ruidum
Ectatomma tuberculatum
Hormigas
Distribución espacial
Competencia interespecífica
Cafetal
Cacaotal
Artfrosur
spellingShingle Ectatomma ruidum
Ectatomma tuberculatum
Hormigas
Distribución espacial
Competencia interespecífica
Cafetal
Cacaotal
Artfrosur
Ectatomma ruidum
Ectatomma tuberculatum
Hormigas
Distribución espacial
Competencia interespecífica
Cafetal
Cacaotal
Artfrosur
Schatz, Bertrand autor/a 15024
Lachaud, Jean Paul Doctor autor/a 2090
Effect of high nest density on spatial relationships in two dominant ectatommine ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)
description Regular dispersion patterns in the spatial distribution of ant nests are linked to both defense of foraging areas and competition for food. They are frequently observed amongst colonies of conspecifics when the availability of colony foundation sites is homogeneous. In order to evaluate the degree of intraspecific competition in the dominant Neotropical ectatommine ant Ectatomma ruidum and the importance of interactions with another dominant sympatric ectatommine ant, E. tuberculatum, we examined the spatial relationships among colonies of these two species in an area with a naturally very high nest density (up to 11500 and 1500 nests/ha, respectively). Data were analyzed by calculation of the Clark and Evans nearest neighbor index and by statistical comparison of the observed mean distance to the nearest neighbor and a theoretical value obtained by Monte-Carlo simulation. The latter procedure allowed analysis of spatial relationships despite the non-haphazard location of E. tuberculatum nests, which were always found at the base of a tree. Whatever the nest density, the mean distance between nearest neighbor nests ofE. ruidum was always higher than that expected for random distribution. This regular dispersion pattern strongly supports the hypothesis that E. ruidum colonies are monodomous. In the three quadrats where they co-occurred, E. ruidum and E. tuberculatum were independently distributed, suggesting a low level of interaction between them. Even at high colony densities, the dominant character of each of these species does not appear to be incompatible with their co-existence, due to the low degree of niche overlap between them.
format Texto
topic_facet Ectatomma ruidum
Ectatomma tuberculatum
Hormigas
Distribución espacial
Competencia interespecífica
Cafetal
Cacaotal
Artfrosur
author Schatz, Bertrand autor/a 15024
Lachaud, Jean Paul Doctor autor/a 2090
author_facet Schatz, Bertrand autor/a 15024
Lachaud, Jean Paul Doctor autor/a 2090
author_sort Schatz, Bertrand autor/a 15024
title Effect of high nest density on spatial relationships in two dominant ectatommine ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)
title_short Effect of high nest density on spatial relationships in two dominant ectatommine ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)
title_full Effect of high nest density on spatial relationships in two dominant ectatommine ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)
title_fullStr Effect of high nest density on spatial relationships in two dominant ectatommine ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)
title_full_unstemmed Effect of high nest density on spatial relationships in two dominant ectatommine ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)
title_sort effect of high nest density on spatial relationships in two dominant ectatommine ants (hymenoptera: formicidae)
url https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Jean-Paul_Lachaud/publication/230561811_Effect_of_high_nest_density_on_spatial_relationships_in_two_dominant_ectatommine_ants_Hymenoptera_Formicidae/links/0912f5017e9a227670000000/Effect-of-high-nest-density-on-spatial-relationships-in-two-dominant-ectatommine-ants-Hymenoptera-Formicidae.pdf
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AT lachaudjeanpauldoctorautora2090 effectofhighnestdensityonspatialrelationshipsintwodominantectatommineantshymenopteraformicidae
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spelling KOHA-OAI-ECOSUR:466732024-08-17T11:26:14ZEffect of high nest density on spatial relationships in two dominant ectatommine ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) Schatz, Bertrand autor/a 15024 Lachaud, Jean Paul Doctor autor/a 2090 textengRegular dispersion patterns in the spatial distribution of ant nests are linked to both defense of foraging areas and competition for food. They are frequently observed amongst colonies of conspecifics when the availability of colony foundation sites is homogeneous. In order to evaluate the degree of intraspecific competition in the dominant Neotropical ectatommine ant Ectatomma ruidum and the importance of interactions with another dominant sympatric ectatommine ant, E. tuberculatum, we examined the spatial relationships among colonies of these two species in an area with a naturally very high nest density (up to 11500 and 1500 nests/ha, respectively). Data were analyzed by calculation of the Clark and Evans nearest neighbor index and by statistical comparison of the observed mean distance to the nearest neighbor and a theoretical value obtained by Monte-Carlo simulation. The latter procedure allowed analysis of spatial relationships despite the non-haphazard location of E. tuberculatum nests, which were always found at the base of a tree. Whatever the nest density, the mean distance between nearest neighbor nests ofE. ruidum was always higher than that expected for random distribution. This regular dispersion pattern strongly supports the hypothesis that E. ruidum colonies are monodomous. In the three quadrats where they co-occurred, E. ruidum and E. tuberculatum were independently distributed, suggesting a low level of interaction between them. Even at high colony densities, the dominant character of each of these species does not appear to be incompatible with their co-existence, due to the low degree of niche overlap between them.Regular dispersion patterns in the spatial distribution of ant nests are linked to both defense of foraging areas and competition for food. They are frequently observed amongst colonies of conspecifics when the availability of colony foundation sites is homogeneous. In order to evaluate the degree of intraspecific competition in the dominant Neotropical ectatommine ant Ectatomma ruidum and the importance of interactions with another dominant sympatric ectatommine ant, E. tuberculatum, we examined the spatial relationships among colonies of these two species in an area with a naturally very high nest density (up to 11500 and 1500 nests/ha, respectively). Data were analyzed by calculation of the Clark and Evans nearest neighbor index and by statistical comparison of the observed mean distance to the nearest neighbor and a theoretical value obtained by Monte-Carlo simulation. The latter procedure allowed analysis of spatial relationships despite the non-haphazard location of E. tuberculatum nests, which were always found at the base of a tree. Whatever the nest density, the mean distance between nearest neighbor nests ofE. ruidum was always higher than that expected for random distribution. This regular dispersion pattern strongly supports the hypothesis that E. ruidum colonies are monodomous. In the three quadrats where they co-occurred, E. ruidum and E. tuberculatum were independently distributed, suggesting a low level of interaction between them. Even at high colony densities, the dominant character of each of these species does not appear to be incompatible with their co-existence, due to the low degree of niche overlap between them.Adobe Acrobat profesional 6.0 o superiorEctatomma ruidumEctatomma tuberculatumHormigasDistribución espacialCompetencia interespecíficaCafetalCacaotalArtfrosurDisponible en líneaSociobiologyhttps://www.researchgate.net/profile/Jean-Paul_Lachaud/publication/230561811_Effect_of_high_nest_density_on_spatial_relationships_in_two_dominant_ectatommine_ants_Hymenoptera_Formicidae/links/0912f5017e9a227670000000/Effect-of-high-nest-density-on-spatial-relationships-in-two-dominant-ectatommine-ants-Hymenoptera-Formicidae.pdfAcceso en línea sin restricciones