Abstract
Leaf-cutting ants are responsible for much of living plant fragment removal in Neotropical regions, causing major damage in both in natural and agricultural systems. To understand the variation in plant fragment removal by leaf-cutting ants and the influence that temporal and spatial factors have on such variation, we evaluated plant fragments collected by two ant species, Atta laevigata and A. sexdens rubropilosa in different seasons (rainy and dry) and in different forest systems (natural area of cerrado sensu stricto and monoculture of Eucalyptus sp.) in 2014 in Goianesia, Goias, Brazil. Heavier plant fragments were removed during the dry season and in monoculture areas; A. laevigata removed heavier fragments than A. sexdens rubropilosa. Furthermore, we observed a positive association between the weight of collected fragments and the weight of worker ants and higher weights in A. laevigata. The study shows that the weight of plant fragments removed by leaf-cutting ants is conditioned temporally and spatially, and by the ant species involved. More detailed studies of each of these factors are need to better understand the dynamics of these foraging ants and how abiotic and biotic factors affect this process.
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