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  5. Rapid ant community reassembly in a Neotropical forest: Recovery dynamics and land‐use legacy
 
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2022
Zweitveröffentlichung
Verlagsversion

Rapid ant community reassembly in a Neotropical forest: Recovery dynamics and land‐use legacy

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Hauptpublikation
EAP_EAP2559.pdf
CC BY-NC 4.0 International
Format: Adobe PDF
Size: 1.86 MB
TUDa URI
tuda/8868
URN
urn:nbn:de:tuda-tuprints-215321
DOI
10.26083/tuprints-00021532
Autor:innen
Hoenle, Philipp O. ORCID 0000-0001-8160-8859
Donoso, David A. ORCID 0000-0002-3408-1457
Argoti, Adriana
Staab, Michael ORCID 0000-0003-0894-7576
Beeren, Christoph von ORCID 0000-0002-0072-5795
Blüthgen, Nico ORCID 0000-0001-6349-4528
Kurzbeschreibung (Abstract)

Regrowing secondary forests dominate tropical regions today, and a mechanistic understanding of their recovery dynamics provides important insights for conservation. In particular, land‐use legacy effects on the fauna have rarely been investigated. One of the most ecologically dominant and functionally important animal groups in tropical forests are the ants. Here, we investigated the recovery of ant communities in a forest–agricultural habitat mosaic in the Ecuadorian Chocó region. We used a replicated chronosequence of previously used cacao plantations and pastures with 1–34 years of regeneration time to study the recovery dynamics of species communities and functional diversity across the two land‐use legacies. We compared two independent components of responses on these community properties: resistance, which is measured as the proportion of an initial property that remains following the disturbance; and resilience, which is the rate of recovery relative to its loss. We found that compositional and trait structure similarity to old‐growth forest communities increased with regeneration age, whereas ant species richness remained always at a high level along the chronosequence. Land‐use legacies influenced species composition, with former cacao plantations showing higher resemblance to old‐growth forests than former pastures along the chronosequence. While resistance was low for species composition and high for species richness and traits, all community properties had similarly high resilience. In essence, our results show that ant communities of the Chocó recovery rapidly, with former cacao reaching predicted old‐growth forest community levels after 21 years and pastures after 29 years. Recovery in this community was faster than reported from other ecosystems and was likely facilitated by the low‐intensity farming in agricultural sites and their proximity to old‐growth forest remnants. Our study indicates the great recovery potential for this otherwise highly threatened biodiversity hotspot.

Freie Schlagworte

ant diversity

chronosequence

Ecuador

forest regeneration

Formicidae

functional traits

land‐use history

tropical forest

Sprache
Fachbereich/-gebiet
10 Fachbereich Biologie > Ecological Networks
DDC
500 Naturwissenschaften und Mathematik > 570 Biowissenschaften, Biologie
Institution
Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Darmstadt
Ort
Darmstadt
Titel der Zeitschrift / Schriftenreihe
Ecological Applications
Jahrgang der Zeitschrift
32
Heftnummer der Zeitschrift
4
ISSN
1939-5582
Verlag
John Wiley & Sons
Publikationsjahr der Erstveröffentlichung
2022
Verlags-DOI
10.1002/eap.2559
PPN
499011872

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