Stellenbosch University
Browse

File(s) not publicly available

Reason: Datasets are hosted in a third party repository.

Synergistic impact of invasive alien trees and the alien Argentine ant on local ant assemblages in the Western Cape Floristic Region

dataset
posted on 2024-07-23, 10:12 authored by Colin Stefan Schoeman

Alien trees, Pinus spp. and Eucalyptus spp., affect ants negatively in the Cape Floristic Region (CFR), a global biodiversity hotspot in South Africa. They reduce ant abundance and species richness, thus also changing ant assemblage structure. This is alarming, because almost 1300 species of plant species in the CFR are dispersed by certain indigenous ants, and thus there is concern for an indirect effect on indigenous plant assemblages. One of the most impacting ant species on seed dispersal is the invasive Argentine ant (Linepithema humile (Mayr)), which discards seeds outside its nest, where they do not germinate. Ten sites, on Vergelegen Wine Estate, were selected to explore these effects of alien plants. These varied from invaded to non-invaded sites. Each site consisted of six sampling points, which in turn consisted of four pitfall traps left out for seven days, during December 2005, February 2006, May 2006 and September 2006. Forty species of ant were sampled, and various analyses used to illustrate the comparative effects of plant invasion. All analytical methods showed that invasive alien plants had a significant impact on the abundance and richness of the ant species assemblage, by creating a dense canopy cover that changed the abiotic environment of the epigaeic ants’ habitat. Furthermore, increased alien tree invasion correlated significantly with Argentine ant abundances. The Argentine ant displaced Pheidole capensis and Camponotus spp., while it decreased the abundances of commonly-occurring indigenous ants, such as Lepisiota capensis and Plagiolepis spp. Displacement by the Argentine ant may be a result of indirect competition for food resources. The effects of invasive aliens are synergistic in that there is a cascade effects from initial plant invasions to subsequent animal invasion.

Funding

Designing a marketing strategy for the DST-NRF Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology at Stellenboshc University

National Research Foundation

Find out more...

History

Publisher

Stellenbosch University

Contributor

Schoeman, Colin S.

Date

2008-01-01

Format

.pdf .doc .csv .xls

Language

en

Geographical Location

Western Cape, South Africa

Academic Group

  • Agrisciences

Related Identifier Type

  • DOI

Relation Type

  • IsPartOf

Recommended Citation

Schoeman, C.S. 2008. Synergistic impact of invasive alien trees and the alien Argentine ant on local ant assemblages in the Western Cape Floristic Region. Stellenbosch University. Dataset. DOI: https://doi.org/10.25413/sun.26355478

Usage metrics

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC