Biogeographical Variation in Termite Distributions Alters Global Deadwood Decay

Author:

Law Stephanie J.1ORCID,Flores‐Moreno Habacuc2ORCID,Parr Catherine L.345ORCID,Adu‐Bredu Stephen67ORCID,Bunney Katherine4ORCID,Cornwell William K.8ORCID,Evouna Ondo Fidèle9ORCID,Powell Jeff R.10ORCID,Quansah Gabriel W.11ORCID,Robertson Mark P.4ORCID,Zanne Amy E.12ORCID,Eggleton Paul1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Life Sciences Department The Natural History Museum London UK

2. Department of Health and Biosecurity CSIRO Brisbane Queensland Australia

3. School of Environmental Sciences University of Liverpool Liverpool UK

4. Department of Zoology & Entomology University of Pretoria Pretoria South Africa

5. School of Animal, Plant and Environmental Sciences University of the Witwatersrand Wits South Africa

6. Biodiversity Conservation and Ecosystem Services Division Forestry Research Institute of Ghana, Council for Scientific and Industrial Research Kumasi Ghana

7. Department of Natural Resources Management CSIR College of Science and Technology Kumasi Ghana

8. School of Biological, Earth & Environmental Sciences University of New South Wales Sydney New South Wales Australia

9. Scientific Cell Department National Agency for National Parks Libreville Gabon

10. Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment Western Sydney University Penrith New South Wales Australia

11. Soil Analytical Services, Soil Testing Laboratory CSIR‐Soil Research Institute Kumasi Ghana

12. Department of Biology University of Miami Miami Florida USA

Abstract

ABSTRACTAimTermites are a crucial group of macroinvertebrates regulating rates of deadwood decomposition across tropical and subtropical regions. When examining global patterns of deadwood decay, termites are treated as a homogenous group. There exist key biogeographical differences in termite distribution. One such clear distinction is the distribution of fungus‐growing termites (FGT, subfamily Macrotermitinae). Considering that climate will have shaped termite distribution and ecosystem processes, we evaluate the roles of termite distribution (presence of FGT) and climate (aridity) on global patterns in deadwood decay.LocationBetween 46° N‐43° S and 175° E‐85° W.Time PeriodPresent (between 2016 and 2021).Major Taxa StudiedTermites (Blattodea: Termitoidae).MethodsWe add salient data to an existing global dataset on deadwood decomposition, including new data from five existing sites and seven additional African sites. We analyse a dataset spanning six continents, 16 countries and 102 experimental sites. Firstly, we evaluate climatic differences (mean annual temperature, mean annual precipitation and mean annual aridity) between sites with and without FGT. Secondly, using aridity as a single comparative climate metric between sites that accounts for temperature and precipitation differences, we examine the interaction between FGT and aridity on global patterns of termite deadwood discovery and decay through multivariate logistic and linear regressions.ResultsTermite‐driven decay and wood discovery increased with aridity; however, responses differed between FGT and NFGT sites. Wood discovery increased with aridity in FGT sites only, suggesting a greater role of FGT to deadwood decay in arid environments. On average, both termite discovery and decay of deadwood were approximately four times greater in regions with FGT compared with regions without FGT.Main ConclusionsTermite discovery and decay of deadwood is climate dependent, and higher decay may be through greater discovery of deadwood in FGT sites. Inclusion of biogeographical differences in termite distribution could potentially alter current and future global estimates of deadwood turnover.

Funder

Royal Society

Natural Environment Research Council

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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