Ant biodiversity and its environmental predictors in the North Kimberley region of Australia’s seasonal tropics

被引:0
作者
Adam T. Cross
Cecilia Myers
Celia N. A. Mitchell
Sophie L. Cross
Christopher Jackson
Rowan Waina
Ladislav Mucina
Kingsley W. Dixon
Alan N. Andersen
机构
[1] The University of Western Australia,School of Plant Biology
[2] Kings Park and Botanic Garden,Department of Environment and Agriculture
[3] Kalumburu Aboriginal Community,Department of Geography and Environmental Studies
[4] Curtin University,undefined
[5] CSIRO Land and Water,undefined
[6] Tropical Ecosystems Research Centre,undefined
[7] Stellenbosch University,undefined
来源
Biodiversity and Conservation | 2016年 / 25卷
关键词
Australian monsoon tropics; Biodiversity; Endemism; Formicidae; Kimberley; Tropical savanna;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Northern Australia supports the world’s largest estate of undeveloped tropical savannas, but previous studies of ant diversity in the region have covered only a fraction of its land area and habitat diversity. We assess patterns of ant species and functional diversity, their environmental predictors, and biogeographic significance in the central North Kimberley region of Australia’s seasonal tropics. Pitfall traps were used to sample ants at 69 plots in representative savanna habitats, collecting a total of 158 species from 30 genera. Total richness was estimated to be as high as 237 species. At least 29 species across 12 genera appear to have been collected for the first time. Only a single invasive ant was recorded from the study area. Based on cluster analysis we identified six compositionally distinct ant communities, each associated with a combination of vegetation type and underlying geology. Species richness and functional diversity was highest in savanna woodlands and grasslands on sandstone-derived soils, with increasing richness also predicted by a lower mean daily temperature range, a more complex understorey, and lower precipitation seasonality. The abundance of nearly all commonly trapped species was related to temperature, moisture, and habitat variables, although these relationships were highly idiosyncratic. Nearly 40 % of the collected species are known only from the North Kimberley region. The high level of endemism, together with the lack of introduced ant species, identifies the North Kimberley ant fauna as having outstanding biodiversity value. Our identification of ant community types based on mappable soil and vegetation units provides a basis for predicting ant distribution throughout the broader region, and therefore contributing to regional conservation planning and management.
引用
收藏
页码:1727 / 1759
页数:32
相关论文
共 150 条
  • [1] Aho K(2014)Model selection for ecologists: the worldviews of AIC and BIC Ecology 95 631-636
  • [2] Derryberry D(1991)Responses of ground-foraging ant communities to three experimental fire regimes in a savanna forest of tropical Australia Biotropica 23 575-585
  • [3] Peterson T(1992)Regulation of ‘momentary’ diversity by dominant species in exceptionally rich ant communities of the Australian seasonal tropics Am Nat 140 401-420
  • [4] Andersen AN(1992)The rainforest ant fauna of the northern Kimberley region of Western Australia (Hymenoptera: formicidae) J Aust Entomol Soc 31 187-192
  • [5] Andersen AN(1993)Ant communities in the Gulf region of Australia’s semi-arid tropics: species composition, patterns of organization, and biogeography Aust J Zool 41 399-414
  • [6] Andersen AN(1995)A classification of Australian ant communities, based on functional groups which parallel plant life-forms in relation to stress and disturbance J Biogeogr 22 15-29
  • [7] Andersen AN(2010)Exploring a new biodiversity frontier: subterranean ants in northern Australia Biodivers Conserv 19 2741-2750
  • [8] Andersen AN(1990)Herbivory by insects in Australian tropical savannas: a review J Biogeogr 17 433-444
  • [9] Andersen AN(2000)Arthropod responses to experimental fire regimes in an Australian tropical savannah: ordinal-level analysis Aust Ecol 25 199-209
  • [10] Brault A(2006)Long-term fire exclusion and ant community structure in an Australian tropical savanna: congruence with vegetation succession J Biogeogr 33 823-832