Abstract

Ants are among the most ubiquitous and harmful invaders worldwide, but there are few regional studies of their relationships with habitat and native ant communities. New Caledonia has a unique and diverse ant fauna that is threatened by exotic ants, but broad-scale patterns of exotic and native ant community composition in relation to habitat remain poorly documented. We conducted a systematic baiting survey of 56 sites representing the main New Caledonian habitat types: rainforest on ultramafic soils (15 sites), rainforest on volcano-sedimentary soils (13), maquis shrubland (15), Melaleuca-dominated savannas (11) and Acacia spirorbis thickets (2). We collected a total of 49 species, 13 of which were exotic. Only five sites were free of exotic species, and these were all rainforest. The five most abundant exotic species differed in their habitat association, with Pheidole megacephala associated with rainforests, Brachymyrmex cf. obscurior with savanna, and Wasmannia auropunctata and Nylanderia vaga present in most habitats. Anoplolepis gracilipes occurred primarily in maquis-shrubland, which contrasts with its rainforest affinity elsewhere. Multivariate analysis of overall ant species composition showed strong differentiation of sites according to the distribution of exotic species, and these patterns were maintained at the genus and functional group levels. Native ant composition differed at invaded versus uninvaded rainforest sites, in the absence of differences in habitat variables. Generalised Myrmicinae and Forest Opportunists were particularly affected by invasion. There was a strong negative relationship between the abundance of W. auropunctata and native ant abundance and richness. This emphasizes that, in addition to dominating many ant communities numerically, some exotic species, and in particular W. auropunctata, have a marked impact on native ant communities.

Highlights

  • Ants are among the most ubiquitous and harmful invaders [1], with exotic species distributed worldwide as a result of human activities

  • In California the Argentine ant Linepithema humile strongly prefers moist habitats [6], and in monsoonal northern Australia the African big-headed ant Pheidole megacephala strongly favors rainforest over savanna [7]

  • B; group 3: sites dominated by exotic ants (3a: P. megacephala; 3b: A. gracilipes; 3c: B. cf. obscurior and 3d: W. auropunctata)

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Summary

Introduction

Ants are among the most ubiquitous and harmful invaders [1], with exotic species distributed worldwide as a result of human activities. Their ability to disrupt native ecosystems has been widely reported [2,3,4,5], their presence and impact is often highly dependent on their habitat preference. There have been few regional studies of the relationship between habitat, exotic ants and native ant communities (e.g. Hill et al [8]). Like most Pacific islands [9], the exceptionally biodiverse New. Caledonia is a major recipient of exotic ant species.

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