Climate change impact on Amazonian ant gardens

Archive ouverte

Dejean, Alain | Petitclerc, Frédéric | Compin, Arthur | Azémar, Frédéric | Talaga, Stanislas | Corbara, Bruno

Edité par CCSD ; Elsevier -

International audience. In Amazonia higher Atlantic sea surface temperatures, greenhouse gasses, deforestation and El Niño events result in the greater frequency of severe droughts, although total rainfall has increased due to wetter rainy seasons, something confirmed in French Guiana from available climatic data (1980À2017). Aiming to study the impact of rainfall on ant gardens (i.e., arboreal ant-epiphyte mutualisms that depend on the atmosphere for water; AGs) initiated by the ponerine ant Neoponera goeldii, we conducted surveys around the Petit Saut and R egina areas (mean annual rainfall: %3,000 mm and %4,000 mm, respectively). Each year, near the end of the dry season we recorded the number of these AGs in 10 £ 5 m sections parallel to the roadsides. The Petit Saut survey (1993À2017) revealed that AG density along roadsides varied only slightly in "wet zones" situated along ditches, whereas in "dry zones" where the soil seasonally dries out it dropped sharply during the drastic 1997 dry season. Then, this density, low due to recurrent droughts, dropped again during the drastic successive 2015À2016 dry seasons. In the R egina survey (2006À2017), we had the opportunity to follow the establishment of AGs in a "dry zone". It was represented by a typical sigmoidal curve and then it stabilized with AG densities higher than at its peak in 1996 in dry zones of Petit Saut, showing the importance of rainfall. Here, too, the drastic 2016 dry season adversely affected the AGs. Finally, the epiphytic composition of the AGs was mainly represented by Aechmea mertensii (a tank bromeliad), Anthurium gracile (Araceae) and Codonanthe crassifolia (Gesneriaceae), but AGs with the tank bromeliad are more resistant to droughts. These AGs are at risk in dry zones if drastic successive dry seasons occur in the future as global warming intensifies while those developing in riparian areas might survive.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Host‐tree selection by the ant garden‐initiating arboreal ponerine Neoponera goeldii

Archive ouverte | Dejean, Alain | CCSD

International audience

Aquatic life in Neotropical rainforest canopies: Techniques using artificial phytotelmata to study the invertebrate communities inhabiting therein

Archive ouverte | Dejean, Alain | CCSD

International audience. In Neotropical rainforest canopies, phytotelmata ("plant-held waters'') shelter diverse aquatic macroinvertebrate communities, including vectors of animal diseases. Studying these communities...

Hollow Internodes Permit a Neotropical Understory Plant to Shelter Multiple Mutualistic Ant Species, Obtaining Protection and Nutrient Provisioning (Myrmecotrophy)

Archive ouverte | Dejean, Alain | CCSD

International audience. The Neotropical understory plant Tachia guianensis (Gentianaceae)—known to shelter the colonies of several ant species in its hollow trunks and branches—does not provide them with food reward...

Chargement des enrichissements...