“…Ants are O. pumilio's primary prey type, corresponding to more than half of the ingested volume (Caldwell, ; Darst, Menéndez‐Guerrero, Coloma, & Cannatella, ; Donnelly, ). This frog also eats a large proportion of mites; however, limited occurrence data and taxonomic knowledge for mite species (e.g., McGugan et al, ) precluded their inclusion in our spatial analyses. Following a comprehensive literature search (as per late 2016) of alkaloid occurrence in ant taxa (Adams et al, ; Chen, Rashid, Feng, Zhao, & Oi, ; Clark, Raxworthy, Rakotomalala, Sierwald, & Fisher, ; Daly et al, , , ; Fox et al, ; Jones et al, , , , ; Jones, Blum, Andersen, Fales, & Escoubas, ; Jones, Blum & Fales, ; Jones, Blum, Howard, et al, ; Leclercq, Braekman, Daloze, & Pasteels, ; Ritter, Rotgans, Talman, Verwiel, & Stein, ; Saporito et al, , ; Schröder et al, ; Spande et al, ; Touchard et al, ; Wheeler, Olubajo, Storm, & Duffield, ), we estimated ant composition dissimilarity based on the distribution of ant species from 10 genera, as follows: Acromyrmex , Anochetus , Aphaenogaster , Atta , Brachymyrmex , Megalomyrmex , Monomorium , Nylanderia , Solenopsis , and Tetramorium .…”