Abstract
Two monogynous species of North African desert ants belonging to the formicine genus Cataglyphis exhibit extremely different habitat preferences, population densities, and population structures. C. fortis is the only Cataglyphis species within the salt-pan flats of the Algerian and Tunisian chotts and sebkhas, whereas C. bicolor, alongside C. albicans and C. ruber, inhabits the nutritionally richer low-shrub semi-deserts surrounding the salt pans. We present a comparative study of the spatio-temporal patterns of colony distribution of the two monogynous species over periods of at least 5 (maximally 15) years. In C. fortis low population densities (0.5 kg body mass per km2) and, correspondingly, large inter-nest distances (40.6 m mean nearest neighbour nest distance) are correlated with absolute intra-annual and high inter-annual nest-site stability (more than 75% inter-annual survival rate) and a monodomous colony structure. In C. bicolor the population density is one hundred times higher (42 kg body mass per km2, 9.1 m mean nearest neighbour nest distance), nest-site stability is extremely low in both intra-annual and inter-annual terms (67% intra-annual survival rate for 13-day periods; less than 5% inter-annual survival rate), and polydomy prevails. These marked differences in population structure are discussed with respect to adapted traits such as foraging range, running speed, and relative lengths of the legs.
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