Abstract

The biotopic distribution, nest structure, wintering conditions, and cold hardiness of four ecologically contrasting ant species (Myrmica angulinodis, M. kamtschatica, M. bicolor, and M. transsibirica) are considered. The cold hardiness of these species is typical of the genus: the supercooling points vary from −28 to −31°C; cold hardiness levels (LT50%) are higher by 5°C. At this level of cold hardiness, ants can be practically ubiquitous across the whole Hypoarctic (Berman et al., 2007). However, the above Myrmica species are strictly segregated (M. kamtschatica occurs in moss bogs, M. angulinodis and M. transsibirica, on dry and warm south slopes, and M. bicolor, in sandy-gravel floodplains), probably due to different requirements for weather conditions in summer and depth of ground thawing. At present, the excess cold hardiness common to the species in question (exceeding the nest temperature by 5–10°C in different years) is not adaptive and may be considered as preadaptive. It could have been acquired during ancient cold epochs or inherited by the genus as a concomitant result of adaptation not to low temperatures but, for instance, to aridity. These Myrmica species do not undergo selection for resistance to negative temperatures since their current level of cold hardiness is excessive, considering the possible wintering temperatures.

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