Ant-termite interactions: an important but under-explored ecological linkage
- PMID: 31876057
- DOI: 10.1111/brv.12577
Ant-termite interactions: an important but under-explored ecological linkage
Abstract
Animal interactions play an important role in understanding ecological processes. The nature and intensity of these interactions can shape the impacts of organisms on their environment. Because ants and termites, with their high biomass and range of ecological functions, have considerable effects on their environment, the interaction between them is important for ecosystem processes. Although the manner in which ants and termites interact is becoming increasingly well studied, there has been no synthesis to date of the available literature. Here we review and synthesise all existing literature on ant-termite interactions. We infer that ant predation on termites is the most important, most widespread, and most studied type of interaction. Predatory ant species can regulate termite populations and subsequently slow down the decomposition of wood, litter and soil organic matter. As a consequence they also affect plant growth and distribution, nutrient cycling and nutrient availability. Although some ant species are specialised termite predators, there is probably a high level of opportunistic predation by generalist ant species, and hence their impact on ecosystem processes that termites are known to provide varies at the species level. The most fruitful future research direction will be to evaluate the impact of ant-termite predation on broader ecosystem processes. To do this it will be necessary to quantify the efficacy both of particular ant species and of ant communities as a whole in regulating termite populations in different biomes. We envisage that this work will require a combination of methods, including DNA barcoding of ant gut contents along with field observations and exclusion experiments. Such a combined approach is necessary for assessing how this interaction influences entire ecosystems.
Keywords: Formicidae; Termitoidae; ants; ecosystem engineer; food web; interaction network; predation; termites.
© 2019 Cambridge Philosophical Society.
References
REFERENCES
-
- References marked with asterisk have been cited within the supporting information.
-
- Aanen, D. K. & Eggleton, P. (2005). Fungus-growing termites originated in African rain forest. Current Biology 15, 851-855.
-
- Abe, T. & Darlington, J. P. E. C. (1985). Distribution and abundance of a mound-building termite, Macrotermes michaelseni, with special reference to its subterranean colonies and ant predators. Physiological Ecology Japan 22, 59-74.
-
- Abe, T. & Matsumoto, T. (1979). Studies on the distribution and ecological role of termites in a lowland rain forest of West Malaysia: (3) distribution and abundance of termites in Pasoh forest reserve. Japanese Journal of Ecology 29, 337-351.
-
- Abensberg-Traun, M. (1991). Survival strategies of the Echidna Tachyglossus aculeatus. Biological conservation 58, 317-328.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources