The impact of coffee and pasture agriculture on predatory and omnivorous leaf-litter ants

被引:0
作者
Dias, Nivia da Silva [1 ]
Zanetti, Ronald [2 ]
Santos, Monica Silva [3 ]
Gomes Villalba Penaflor, Maria Fernanda [3 ]
Forti Broglio, Sonia Maria [4 ]
Charles Delabie, Jacques Hubert [5 ]
机构
[1] Embrapa Agroind Trop, BR-60511110 Fortaleza, Ceara, Brazil
[2] Univ Fed Lavras UFLA, Dept Entomol, BR-37200000 Lavras, MG, Brazil
[3] Escola Super Agr Luiz de Queiroz ESALQ USP, Dept Entomol, BR-13418900 Piracicaba, SP, Brazil
[4] Univ Fed Alagoas CECA, UFAL, Ctr Ciencias Agr, BR-57100000 Rio Largo, AL, Brazil
[5] Ctr Pesquisa Cacau Rod Ilheus Itabuna, Convenio UESC CEPLAC, Lab Mirmecol, BR-45600000 Itabuna, BA, Brazil
关键词
SPECIES RICHNESS; FOREST; BIODIVERSITY; COMMUNITIES; DIVERSITY; BIOINDICATORS; AUSTRALIA; RESPONSES; CONSERVATION; HYMENOPTERA;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
Q96 [昆虫学];
学科分类号
摘要
Ants are known to function as reliable biological indicators for habitat impact assessment. They play a wide range of ecological roles depending on their feeding and nesting habits. By clustering ants in guilds, it is possible both to assess how agriculture and forest fragmentation can disturb ant communities and to predict the ecological impacts due to losses of a specific guild. This study aimed at determining the impact of non-shaded coffee and pasture agriculture on predatory and omnivorous guilds of leaf-litter ants of Atlantic Forest fragments in Minas Gerais, Brazil. Both coffee and pasture agriculture influenced leaf-litter ant community, although coffee was more disruptive than pasture. Coffee agriculture not only disturbed the diversity of predatory ants, but also negatively affected the number of predatory and omnivorous ants when compared to forest fragments. In contrast, pasture agriculture only disrupted the abundance of predatory ants. Fragment edges skirting crops were negatively affected in terms of leaf-litter ant abundance, but not diversity. Cluster analysis showed that forest fragments were similar irrespective of the cultivation, but the borders were similar to the crop. The study assessed agriculture impact by surveying ant guilds, and revealed that the predatory guild is more susceptible than omnivorous ants.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 43 条
[1]  
Andersen Alan N., 1997, Conservation Ecology, V1, pUnpaginated
[2]  
Andersen AN, 2004, FRONT ECOL ENVIRON, V2, P291
[3]   Using ants as bioindicators in land management: simplifying assessment of ant community responses [J].
Andersen, AN ;
Hoffmann, BD ;
Muller, WJ ;
Griffiths, AD .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 2002, 39 (01) :8-17
[4]  
[Anonymous], 1991, CLASSIFICACAO VEGETA
[5]   Reduced diversity and complexity in the leaf-litter ant assemblage of Colombian coffee plantations [J].
Armbrecht, I ;
Rivera, L ;
Perfecto, I .
CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, 2005, 19 (03) :897-907
[6]   Litter-twig dwelling ant species richness and predation potential within a forest fragment and neighboring coffee plantations of contrasting habitat quality in Mexico [J].
Armbrecht, I ;
Perfecto, I .
AGRICULTURE ECOSYSTEMS & ENVIRONMENT, 2003, 97 (1-3) :107-115
[7]   The effects of land use on the structure of ground-foraging ant communities in the Argentine Chaco [J].
Bestelmeyer, BT ;
Wiens, JA .
ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, 1996, 6 (04) :1225-1240
[8]  
Bestelmeyer BT, 2000, ENV ECOLOGY, V3, P143
[9]   Guilds or functional groups: does it matter? [J].
Blondel, J .
OIKOS, 2003, 100 (02) :223-231
[10]  
Bolton Barry, 2003, Memoirs of the American Entomological Institute (Gainesville), V71, P1