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Predation by an exotic lizard, Anolis sagrei, alters the ant community structure in betelnut palm plantations in southern Taiwan

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dc.contributor.author Huang S.-C. en
dc.contributor.author Norval, Gerrut en
dc.contributor.author Tso I.-M. en
dc.date.accessioned 2012-11-01T16:31:26Z
dc.date.available 2012-11-01T16:31:26Z
dc.date.issued 2008 en
dc.identifier.citation Ecological Entomology en
dc.identifier.citation 33 en
dc.identifier.citation 5 en
dc.identifier.issn 3076946 en
dc.identifier.other 10.1111/j.1365-2311.2008.00995.x en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/7206
dc.description.abstract 1. Predators can affect prey directly by reducing prey abundance and indirectly by altering behavioural patterns of prey. From previous studies, there is little evidence that ant community structure is affected by vertebrate predation. 2. Researchers tend to consider the interactions between vertebrate predators and ants to be weak. The present study examined the impact of the exotic invasive lizard, Anolis sagrei, on the ant community structure by manipulating the density of lizards within enclosures. The natural density of A. sagrei in the field was surveyed and used as the stocking density rate in the lizard-present sub-enclosures. 3. Before the lizard density was manipulated, there was no difference in the ant diversity between sub-enclosures. After the lizard density manipulation, the ant diversity in sub-enclosures with A. sagrei present was significantly different from that of enclosures where the lizards were absent, although the overall ant abundance did not differ significantly. 4. The ant diversity difference was generated by a significant reduction of the ant species Pheidole fervens in sub-enclosures with A. sagrei present. Such an abundance change might be the result of direct predation by the lizards, or it might be generated by a foraging site shift by this ant. 5. The results of this study thus demonstrated that the invasion of an exotic vertebrate can significantly alter the community structure of ants, perhaps through the combined direct and indirect effects of lizards on ants. © 2008 The Authors. en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Ants; Lizards; Norops sagrei; Pheidole fervens; Predation ant; biological invasion; biological survey; community structure; invasive species; lizard; monocotyledon; plantation; population density; predation; Anolis sagrei; Formicidae; Norops sagrei; Pheidole fervens; Squamata; Vertebrata en
dc.title Predation by an exotic lizard, Anolis sagrei, alters the ant community structure in betelnut palm plantations in southern Taiwan en
dc.type Article en


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