Sign up & Download
Sign in

Species richness, abundance and distribution of myrmecophilous beetles in nests of Formica aquilonia ants

by Jussi Päivinen, Petri Ahlroth, Veijo Kaitala, Jukka Suhonen
Annales Zoologici Fennici (2004)

Abstract

Some ecological theories predict a positive relationship between species richness and resource size, resource abundance, or resource concentration. In this study, we tested these three hypotheses with myrmecophilous beetles, which use ant nests as their hosts. The resource concentration hypothesis predicts that patches with a high density of a resource support high richness of species dependent on that specific resource. The resource abundance hypothesis predicts that the hosts offering more resources support more species. The resource size hypothesis predicts that larger hosts support more species than smaller hosts. We collected beetles from nests of the nest building wood ant Formica aquilonia. In 49 F. aquilonia nests, we observed 965 individual beetles and 16 species of myrmecophilous beetle. Both the nearest neighbour distance and the volume of ant nests influenced species richness and beetle number. The beetle species utilising several hosts were more widespread and more abundant than the specialist beetle species. Thus, our findings support the resource concentration, resource size and resource abundance hypotheses.

Cite this document (BETA)

Sign up today - FREE

Mendeley saves you time finding and organizing research. Learn more

  • All your research in one place
  • Add and import papers easily
  • Access it anywhere, anytime

Start using Mendeley in seconds!

Already have an account? Sign in

Readership Statistics

3 Readers on Mendeley
by Discipline
 
by Academic Status
 
33% Post Doc
 
33% Researcher (at an Academic Institution)
 
33% Associate Professor
by Country
 
33% Turkey
 
33% Argentina
 
33% France