Blog List

Wednesday 20 July 2016

Ant abundance increases with clearing size

Published Date
First online: 

Title 

Ant abundance increases with clearing size

  • Author 
  • Adam Véle 
  • Jaroslav Holuša
  • Jakub Horák

  • Abstract 

  • Ants are an important part of biodiversity and are useful bioindicators. Our aim was to determine whether ant species richness and composition differ among large clear-cuts (ca. 3000 m2), small forest gaps (ca. 400 m2), and areas of mature forest. The research was conducted in a large plantation of Picea abies in the Jizerske Mountains in the Czech Republic at an elevation of ca. 900 m a.s.l. Ants were sampled using pitfall traps in three areas, each of which had a large clear-cut, mature forest, and gaps; a randomized complete block design was used. Species richness and composition of ant assemblages differed significantly among plots in the three treatments. The results showed that ant abundance and diversity were similarly low in small gaps and in closed-canopy mature stands; in comparison, large clear-cuts supported significantly higher species richness, more complex species composition, and a higher abundance of ants. Six species were found in large clear-cuts, but only one and two species were collected in small gaps and mature forests, respectively. Our findings suggest that small-scale forest management is not suitable for maintaining ant diversity.

  • References 

    1. Alonso LE (2000) Ants as indicators of diversity. In: Agosti D, Alonso LA, Schultz TR (eds) Ants—standard methods for measuring and monitoring biodiverzity. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington DC, pp 80–88
    2. Aussenac G (2000) Interactions between forest stands and microclimate: ecophysiological aspects and consequences for silviculture. Ann For Sci 57:287–301CrossRef
    3. Baláž E, Kotecký V, Machalová L, Poštulka Z (2008) Vliv holosečného hospodaření na půdu, vodu a biodiverzitu. Hnutí Duha, Brno
    4. Banschbach VS, Levit N, Herbers JM (1997) Nest temperatures and thermal preferences of a forest ant species: is seasonal polydomy a thermoregulatory mechanism? Insect Soc 44:109–122CrossRef
    5. Bonn A, Gaston KJ (2005) Capturing biodiversity: selecting priority areas for conservation using different criteria. Biodivers Coserv 14:1083–1100CrossRef
    6. Cogliastro A, Paquette A (2012) Thinning effect on light regime and growth of underplanted red oak and black cherry in post-agricultural forests of south-eastern Canada. New Forest 43:941–954CrossRef
    7. Colwell RK (2006) EstimateS: statistical estimation of species richness and shared species from samples. Version 8. Persistent URL http://​purl.​oclc.​org/​estimates
    8. Czechowski W, Radchenko A, Czechowska W (2002) The ants (Hymenoptera, Formicidae) of Poland. Museum and Institute of Zoology PAS, Warszawa
    9. Decocq G, Aubert M, Dupont F, Alard D, Saguez R, Wattez-Franger A, De Foucault B, Delelis-Dusollier A, Bardat J (2004) Plant diversity in a managed temperate deciduous forest: understory response to two silvicultural systems. J Appl Ecol 41:1065–1079CrossRef
    10. Domisch T, Finér L, Laiho R, Karsisto M, Laine J (2000) Decomposition of Scots pine litter and the fate of released carbon in pristine and drained pine mires. Soil Biol Biochem 32:1571–1580CrossRef
    11. Eckerberg K (1987) Environmental protection in Swedish forestry: a study of the implementation process. Doctoral thesis, University of Umea, Umea
    12. Emmer IM, Fanta J, Khobus AT, Kooijman AM, Sevink J (1998) Reversing borelization as a means to restore biodiversity in Central-European mountain forests—an example from the Krkonose Mountains, Czech Republic. Biodiv Conserv 7:229–247CrossRef
    13. Felton A, Lindbladh M, Bruneta J, Fritz Ö (2010) Replacing coniferous monocultures with mixed-species production stands: an assessment of the potential benefits for forest biodiversity in northern Europe. For Ecol Manag 260:939–947CrossRef
    14. Ferris R, Humphrey JW (1999) A review of potential biodiversity indicators for application in British forests. Forestry 72:313–328CrossRef
    15. Gorham LE, King SL, Keeland BD, Mopper S (2002) Effects of canopy gaps and flooding on homopterans in a bottomland hardwood forest. Wetlands 22:514–549CrossRef
    16. Gotelli NJ, Colwell RK (2001) Quantifying biodiversity: procedures and pitfalls in the measurement and comparison of species richness. Ecol Lett 4:379–391CrossRef
    17. Gotelli NJ, Ellison AM, Dunn RR, Sanders NJ (2011) Counting ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae): biodiversity sampling and statistical analysis for myrmecologists. Myrmecol News 15:13–19
    18. Härkönen S, Sorvari J (2014) Species richness of associates of ants in the nests of red wood ant Formica polyctena (Hymenoptera, Formicidae). Insect Conserv Diver 7:485–495CrossRef
    19. Hlásny T, Kristek S, Holuša J, Trombik J, Urbancova N (2011) Snow disturbances in secondary Norway spruce forests in Central Europe: regression modeling and its implications for forest management. For Ecol Manag 262:2151–2161CrossRef
    20. Horák J, Rebl K (2013) The species richness of click beetles in ancient pasture woodland benefits from a high level of sun exposure. J Insect Conserv 17:307–318CrossRef
    21. Horák J, Vodka S, Kout J, Halda JP, Bogusch P, Pech P (2014) Biodiversity of most dead wood-dependent organisms in thermophilic temperate oak woodlands thrives on diversity of open landscape structures. For Ecol Manag 15:80–85CrossRef
    22. Kipyatkov VE, Lopatina EB (2002) Reaction norm in response to temperature may change to adapt rapid brood development to boreal and subarctic climates in Myrmica ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae). Eur J Entomol 99:197–208CrossRef
    23. Kirby JK, Watkins CH (1998) The ecological history of European forests. CAB International, New York
    24. Kone M, Konate S, Yeo K, Kouassi PK, Linsenmair KE (2014) Effects of management intensity on ant diversity in cocoa plantation (Oume, centre west Côte d’Ivoire). J Insect Conserv 18:701–712CrossRef
    25. Kupka I (2006) Recreational load as a driving variable for urban forests. J Forest Sci 52:324–328
    26. López F, Serrano JM, Acosta FJ (1992) Temperature-vegetation structure interaction: the effect on the activity of the ant Messor barbarus (L.). Plant Ecol 99–100:119–128CrossRef
    27. Maeto K, Sato S (2004) Impacts of forestry on ant species richness and composition in warm-temperate forests of Japan. For Ecol Manag 187:213–223CrossRef
    28. Maňák V, Nordenhem H, Björklund N, Lenoir L, Nordlander G (2013) Ants protect conifer seedlings from feeding damage by the pine. Agr Forest Entomol 15:98–105CrossRef
    29. Mc Dermott C, Cashore BV, Kanowski P (2010) Global environmental forest policies: an international comparison. Earthscan, London
    30. Ministerstvo Zemědělství (2014) Zpráva o stavu lesa a lesního hospodářství České republiky v roce 2013. Ministerstvo Zemědělství, Praha
    31. Nagai M, Yoshida T (2006) Variation in understory structure and plant species diversity influenced by silvicultural treatments among 21- to 26-year old Picea glehnii plantations. J For Res 11:1–10CrossRef
    32. Nelson CR, Halpern CB (2005) Short-term effects of timber harvest and forest edges on ground-layer mosses and liverworts. Can J Bot 83:610–620CrossRef
    33. Newmaster SG, Parker WC, Bell FW, Paterson JM (2007) Effects of forest floor disturbances by mechanical site preparation on floristic diversity in a central Ontario clearcut. For Ecol Manag 246:196–207CrossRef
    34. Olchev A, Radler K, Sogachev A, Panferov O, Gravenhorst G (2009) Application of a three-dimensional model for assessing effects of small clear-cuttings on radiation and soil temperature. Ecol Model 220:3046–3056CrossRef
    35. Overbeck M, Schmidt M (2012) Modelling infestation risk of Norway spruce by Ips typographus (L.) in the Lower Saxon Harz Mountains (Germany). For Ecol Manag 266:115–125CrossRef
    36. Palladini JD, Jones MG, Sanders NJ, Jules ES (2007) The recovery of ant communities in regenerating temperate conifer forests. For Ecol Manag 242:619–624CrossRef
    37. Palviainen M, Finér L, Lauren A, Piirainen S, Starr M (2005) Changes in the above- and below-ground biomass and nutrient pools of ground vegetation after clear-cutting of a mixed boreal forest. Plant Soil 275:157–167CrossRef
    38. Phillips ID, Cobb TP, Spence JR, Brigham RM (2006) Salvage logging, edge effects, and carabid beetles: connections to conservation and sustainable forest management. Environ Entomol 35:950–957CrossRef
    39. Punttila P (1996) Succession, forest fragmentation, and the distribution of wood ants. Oikos 75:291–298CrossRef
    40. Punttila P, Haila Y (1996) Colonisation of a burned forest by ants in the southern Finnish Boreal Forest. Silva Fennica 30:421–435CrossRef
    41. Punttila P, Haila Y, Niemelä J, Pajunen T (1994) Ant communities in fragments of old-growth taiga and managed surroundings. Ann Zool Fenn 31:131–144
    42. Rosengren R, Pamilo P (1978) Effect of winter timber felling on behaviour of foraging wood ants (Formica rufagroup) in early spring. Mem Zool 29:143–155
    43. Sorvari J, Hakkarainen H (2007) Wood ants are wood ants: deforestation causes population declines in the polydomous wood ant Formica aquilonia. Ecol Entomol 32:707–711CrossRef
    44. Ter Braak CJF, Smilauer P (2002) CANOCO reference manual and CanoDraw for Windows user’s guide: software for canonical community ordination (version 4.5). Microcomputer Power, Ithaca, New York
    45. Torossian C, Roques L (1984) The answers of the ant Formica lugubris Zett to anthropic degenerative process of french sub-alpine forests. Bull Ecol 15:77–90
    46. Véle A, Holuša J, Frouz J (2009) Sampling for ants in different-aged spruce forests: a comparison of methods. Eur J Soil Biol 45:301–305CrossRef
    47. Véle A, Frouz J, Holuša J, Kalčík J (2010) Chemical properties of forest soils as affected by nests of Myrmica ruginodis (Formicidae). Biologia 65:122–127CrossRef
    48. Véle A, Holuša J, Frouz J, Konvička O (2011) Local and landscape drivers of ant and carabid beetle communities during spruce forest succession. Eur J Soil Biol 47:349–356CrossRef
    49. Wynhoff I, Bakker RB, Oteman B, Arnaldo PS, van Langevelde F (2015) Phengaris (Maculinea) alcon butterflies deposit their eggs on tall plants with many large buds in the vicinity of Myrmica ants. Ins Conserv Diver 8:177–188CrossRef
    50. Zmihorski M (2010) Distribution of red wood ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) in the clear-cut areas of a managed forest in Western Poland. J For Res 15:145–148CrossRef

  • For further details log on website :

No comments:

Post a Comment

Advantages and Disadvantages of Fasting for Runners

Author BY   ANDREA CESPEDES  Food is fuel, especially for serious runners who need a lot of energy. It may seem counterintuiti...