Summary:
Ant communities are generally extremely interactive, and competition between ant species seems to be widespread. This characteristic of ant communities tends to produce a uniform pattern of nest distribution. In this study, we aimed to test the nest distribution pattern, putting forward hypotheses to explain the pattern. Nest mapping was carried out by delimiting ten one-square-meter quadrats, randomly located in a remnant of tropical rainforest in Viçosa, Brazil. In each quadrat, the nests were surveyed in the litter and surface soil up to 3 cm deep. A total of 295 nests from 41 ant species were collected in the ten quadrats. The pattern of nest distribution in the whole forest was aggregated, while the species showed a random distribution. The pattern of nest distribution inside each quadrat was also aggregated. The presence of species, such as Brachymyrmex sp.1 and Hypoponera sp.4 , with high nest densities suggests the occurrence of nest budding. This may be the reason for the aggregated nest distribution. Another explanation for this apparent aggregation is species specialization in a patchily distributed habitat. The results suggest that competition is not an important process in the regulation of soil and litter ants distribution and, consequently, in the regulation of species richness in the studied area.
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Received 8 June 2000; revised 28 August 2000 and 1 March 2001; accepted 21 March 2001.
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Soares, S., Schoereder, J. Ant-nest distribution in a remnant of tropical rainforest in southeastern Brazil. Insectes soc. 48, 280–286 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1007/PL00001778
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/PL00001778