JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. . Wiley-Blackwell and Nordic Society Oikos are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Oikos. Savolainen, R. and Vepsalainen, K. 1988. A competition hierarchy among boreal ants: impact on resource partitioning and community structure. -Oikos 51: 135-155.Differences in social organization and behaviour rank ant species into a competition hierarchy (starting with superior competitors): territorials (e.g., the Formica rufa -group red wood ants), encounterers (e.g. Camponotus, Lasius niger), and submissives (e.g., Formica fusca). Territorials and encounterers behave aggressively against individuals of alien colonies; these species are not expected to cooccur. Submissives behave recessively and may coexist with stronger species, but their forager numbers and nest densities should decrease. If such small-scale behavioural processes structure the ant community, predictable larger-scale nest-distribution pattern of the species is expected. We tested the expectations with bait experiments and nest mapping, and modelled the results by multiway contingency tables. Submissives showed complementary abundances with territorials in terms of forager numbers on the baits, and their nest densities within the territory increased toward its periphery. Pressure by territorial and encounter species on the baits caused the submissive species to shift from protein to carbohydrate. Territorials and encounterers had complementary occurrences on the baits. The nests of territorials were far apart, with only occasional nests of encounter species at the outskirts of the territory. In the late successional habitats of the boreal taiga biome superior territorial competitors, especially the polycalic red wood ant species, assume the role of organizing centers of ant species assemblages.
Sympatric speciation through intraspecific social parasitism has been proposed for the evolution of Hymenopteran workerless parasites. Such inquilines exploit related host taxa to produce their own sexual offspring. The relatedness of inquilines to their hosts has been generalized in Emery's rule, suggesting that social parasites are close or the closest relatives to their host species. If the closest relative of each parasite is its host, then multiple independent origins of the parasite species are implied even within a single genus, probably through sympatric speciation. To test the plausibility of sympatric speciation in inquilines, we conducted a mitochondrial DNA phylogenetic analysis in three inquiline-host pairs of Myrmica ant species. We show that congeneric inquilines have originated independently several times. We also show that two of the inqulines are more closely related to their hosts than to any other species. Our results suggest sympatric speciation of Myrmica inquilines. Sympatric speciation is probably facilitated by the social biology and ecology of Myrmica, with polygyny as a prerequisite for the evolution of intraspecific parasitism.
The native noble crayfish Astacus astacus L., and the introduced North American signal crayfish Pacifastacus leniusculus Dana, co‐occur in Slickolampi, a small lake in southern Finland. That both species have lived side‐by‐side for 30 yr without any signs of crayfish plague Aphanomyces astaci, indicates that the P. leniusculus population must be plague‐free. According to annual trap catches and population size estimates, A. astacus was clearly dominant in the 1970s and most of the 1980s. At the end of the 1980s, however, there was a shift in the relative abundances of the two species, and in the 1990s, P.leniusculus became dominant. As the 1990s drew to a close, it accounted for >98% of total catches. Originating from a minor stocking (only 900 2nd stage juveniles) P. leniusculus has not augmented the existing fauna in this lake but has almost completely replaced A. astacus. Both species seem to a great extent to prefer the same types of biotope but P. leniusculus is distinctly more demanding and was encountered less often than A. astacus on gently‐sloping soft shores. The proportion of A. astacus with chelae injuries (16 yr, mean 17.3%) was nearly twice that of P. leniusculus (9.3%), suggesting that agonistic interspecific encounters do occur and that P. leniusculus is much more competitive. However, the consistent weakening of A. astacus, even at sites with only a low density of P. leniusculus, indicates that the elimination of A. astacus is not adequately explained by competitive exclusion. We suggest that its disappearance is governed by a combination of several interacting mechanisms, of which harvest (≥100 mm specimens of both species) and interspecific competition with P.leniusculus were initially the main reasons for the decline in the population. The ultimate reason for the collapse of A. astacus seems to have been the almost complete cessation of successful reproduction, presumably due to reproductive interference between the two species. Interspecific mating results in females laying sterile eggs. Although both species suffer from the ensuing loss of recruitment, the consequences are less serious for P. leniusculus, which has a higher capacity for population increase than A. astacus: the smaller the proportion of A. astacus, the greater the role played by reproductive interference as a replacement mechanism.
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org. . Wiley-Blackwell and Nordic Society Oikos are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Oikos. Savolainen, R. and Vepsalainen, K. 1989. Niche differentiation of ant species within territories of the wood ant Formica polyctena. -Oikos 56: 3-16.The question if dominant ant species affect habitat use of other ant species was studied around two mounds of the territorial Formica polyctena. We sampled foraging ants at 10, 30 and 60 m from the mounds in four vertical layers on rocky outcrop interspersed with small vegetation patches and in neighbouring forest. We tested expected interactions among ant species on the basis of a linear competition hierarchy concept consisting of three levels: territorial (top competitors), encounter (aggressive but nonterritorial) and submissive (nonaggressive) species. We focussed on resource partitioning by space (not by food) and shifts in use of vertical layers of the habitat in presence of the territorial species. F polyctena was present everywhere except in the litter. Its numbers decreased with distance from its mound, although its activity was substantially patchy within each distance zone. The encounter species occurred occasionally in places where F. polyctena was scarce. The submissive F. fusca, morphologically similar to the top dominant, did not respond by layer shifts; but its numbers decreased toward the mound of F polyctena. The submissive Myrmica shifted from surface of ground to litter and shrub layers at high densities of the dominant. Small colonies and short foraging distances of the submissive species allow coexistence within the territory in lowdensity patches of F polyctena. Our ant community consists of three functional guilds corresponding to taxonomic and morphological guilds: the larger above-ground Formicinae, the smaller and compacter Formicinae, and the small litter-inhabiting Myrmicinae. Interference competition is stronger and more effective among the Formicinae than among the Myrmicinae or between the subfamilies, but the top dominant affects all ant species of the community. Coexistence between the submissives and the top dominant is facilitated by niche differentiation and behavioural responses in the presence of the top dominant.
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