Common ant species dominate morphospace: unraveling the morphological diversity in the Brazilian Amazon Basin

Author:

Andrade‐Silva Joudellys12ORCID,Baccaro Fabrício B.3ORCID,Prado Lívia P.24ORCID,Guénard Benoit5ORCID,Kass Jamie M.67ORCID,Warren Dan L.89ORCID,Economo Evan P.7ORCID,Silva Rogério R.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Programa de Pós‐Graduação em Agricultura e Ambiente, Universidade Estadual do Maranhão Sao Luis MA Brazil

2. Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi, Coordenação de Ciências da Terra e Ecologia Belém PA Brazil

3. Programa de Pós‐Graduação em Zoologia, Universidade Federal do Amazonas Manaus AM Brazil

4. Department of Evolution, Ecology and Organismal Biology, Museum of Biological Biodiversity, The Ohio State University Columbus OH USA

5. School of Biological Sciences, The University of Hong Kong Hong Kong Hong Kong SAR

6. Macroecology Laboratory, Graduate School of Life Sciences, Tohoku University Miyagi Japan

7. Biodiversity and Biocomplexity Unit, Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University Okinawa Japan

8. Environmental Science and Informatics Section, Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University Okinawa Japan

9. Gulbali Institute for Applied Ecology, Charles Sturt University Albury NSW Australia

Abstract

Rare plant and vertebrate species have been documented to contribute disproportionately to the total morphological structure of species assemblages. These species often possess morphologically extreme traits and occupy the boundaries of morphological space. As rare species are at greater risk of extinction than more widely distributed species, human‐induced disturbances can strongly affect ecosystem functions related to assemblage morphology. Here, we assess to what extent the distributions of ant morphological traits are supported by morphologically extreme species and how they are distributed among habitats in a global biodiversity hotspot, the Brazilian Amazon. We used a morphological database comprising 15 continuous morphological traits and 977 expert‐validated ant species distributed across the Brazilian Amazon. We produced species range estimates using species distribution models or alpha hulls (when few records were available). Next, we conducted a principal components analysis to combine traits into a space with reduced dimensionality (morphospace). Then, we identified morphologically extreme species in this space and quantified their contributions to morphological diversity across different habitat types in the Brazilian Amazon Basin. We identified 114 morphologically extreme ant species across the Amazon ant morphospace. These species also accounted for a large percentage of morphospace filling, exceeding 99% representation in the most disturbed habitats in the Amazon. Our results suggest that a few morphologically extreme species capture most of the variation in ant morphology and, therefore, the spectrum of ecosystem functions performed by ants in the Brazilian Amazon Basin. Further, unlike in many other groups, these extreme morphologies were represented by the set of most common species. These results suggest greater functional redundancy and resilience in Brazilian Amazon ants, but more broadly, they contribute to our understanding of ecological processes that sustain ecosystem functions.

Publisher

Wiley

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