Affiliation:
1. Avignon Université, Aix Marseille Univ, CNRS, IRD, IMBE, Avignon, France
2. Institut de recherche pour la conservation des zones humides méditerranéennes Tour du Valat, Le Sambuc, 13200 Arles, France
Abstract
Within a local assemblage, ecosystem engineers can have major impacts on population dynamics, community composition and ecosystem functions by transforming or creating new habitats. They act as an ecological filter altering community composition through a set of environmental variables. The impact of ants on their environment has been widely studied, but their multi-component effects (both trophic and non-trophic) have been rarely addressed. We investigated the roles of
Messor barbarus
, one of the commonest harvester ant species in south-western European Mediterranean grasslands. We analysed soil physico-chemical parameters, above-ground vegetation (e.g. species richness, plant community, micro-local heterogeneity, plant biomass) and above- and below-ground fauna (macrofauna, Collembola, Acari and nematodes). A clear and strong local impact of
M. barbarus
on soil, vegetation and fauna compartments emerges. The environmental filter is altered by modifications to soil physico-chemical properties, and the biotic filter by changes to plant communities and altered above- and below-ground fauna abundance, occurrence and community structure. The engineering activity of
M. barbarus
affects not only these separate ecosystem components but also the trophic and non-trophic relationships between them. By altering ecological filters at a local scale,
M. barbarus
creates habitat heterogeneity that may in turn increase ecological niches in these highly diverse ecosystems.
Funder
Région Sud-PACA
Tour Du Valat Research Institute
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine
Cited by
22 articles.
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