Vegetation structure of plantain-based agrosystems determines numerical dominance in community of ground-dwelling ants

Author:

Dassou Anicet Gbéblonoudo123,Tixier Philippe34,Dépigny Sylvain23,Carval Dominique35

Affiliation:

1. BIORAVE, Faculty of Sciences and Technologies, Dassa, UNSTIM, Benin

2. CARBAP, Douala, Cameroon

3. UPR GECO, CIRAD, Montpellier, France

4. Departemento de Agricultura y Agroforestria, CATIE, Turrialba, Costa Rica

5. UPR GECO, CIRAD, Le Lamentin, France

Abstract

In tropics, ants can represent an important part of animal biomass and are known to be involved in ecosystem services, such as pest regulation. Understanding the mechanisms underlying the structuring of local ant communities is therefore important in agroecology. In the humid tropics of Africa, plantains are cropped in association with many other annual and perennial crops. Such agrosystems differ greatly in vegetation diversity and structure and are well-suited for studying how habitat-related factors affect the ant community. We analysed abundance data for the six numerically dominant ant taxa in 500 subplots located in 20 diversified, plantain-based fields. We found that the density of crops with foliage at intermediate and high canopy strata determined the numerical dominance of species. We found no relationship between the numerical dominance of each ant taxon with the crop diversity. Our results indicate that the manipulation of the densities of crops with leaves in the intermediate and high strata may help maintain the coexistence of ant species by providing different habitat patches. Further research in such agrosystems should be performed to assess if the effect of vegetation structure on ant abundance could result in efficient pest regulation.

Funder

CIRAD: AIRD grant

C2D project

E.U. FEDER

Publisher

PeerJ

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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