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The remarkable resilience of ant assemblages following major vegetation change in an arid ecosystem
Authors:Kimberly Franklin
Institution:Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, 2021 N. Kinney Road, Tucson, AZ 85743, USA
Abstract:In northwestern Mexico, large tracts of native desert scrub and thorn scrub vegetation are being converted to non-native grass pastures at an increasing rate in an effort to increase cattle production. Pasture development has large impacts on vegetation structure and perennial plant diversity, but little is known of the potential ecological consequences of this landscape transformation for other taxa. I compared the abundance, diversity, species composition and structure of ant assemblages in native habitats and non-native grass pastures across a longitudinal rainfall gradient in central Sonora, Mexico. Land conversion resulted in minor reductions of alpha and gamma diversity and had no effect on beta diversity or species turnover. The influence of land conversion on species composition was small in comparison to the influence of other factors. In addition, ant assemblages in native habitats and non-native grass pastures were similar to each other in regards to both species relative abundance distributions and functional group composition. These results suggest that ants are remarkably resilient to the conversion of native desert scrub and thorn scrub habitats to non-native grass pastures, which is consistent with the growing body of research reporting weak and inconsistent responses of ant assemblages to grazing in arid rangelands.
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