Local and landscape environmental heterogeneity drive ant community structure in temperate semi-natural upland grasslands

GND
1167269675
ORCID
0000-0001-9444-2229
Affiliation
Thünen-Institut für Biodiversität
Pérez Sánchez, Antonio José;
GND
1150432470
ORCID
0000-0002-1686-8811
Affiliation
Institute of Geoecology, Technische Universität Braunschweig
Schibalski, Anett;
GND
1023558203
ORCID
0000-0002-8577-7980
Affiliation
Institute of Geoecology, Technische Universität Braunschweig
Schröder, Boris;
GND
133084949
ORCID
0000-0002-2544-640X
Affiliation
Thünen-Institut für Biodiversität
Klimek, Sebastian;
GND
12345543X
ORCID
0000-0002-3420-0380
Affiliation
Thünen-Institut für Biodiversität
Dauber, Jens

Environmental heterogeneity is an important driver of ecological communities. Here, we assessed the effects of local and landscape spatial environmental heterogeneity on ant community structure in temperate semi-natural upland grasslands of Central Germany. We surveyed 33 grassland sites representing a gradient in elevation and landscape composition. Local environmental heterogeneity was measured in terms of variability of temperature and moisture within and between grassland sites. Grassland management type (pasture vs. meadows) was additionally included as a local environmental heterogeneity measure. The complexity of habitat types in the surroundings of grassland sites was used as a measure of landscape environmental heterogeneity. As descriptors of ant community structure, we considered species composition, community evenness, and functional response traits. We found that extensively grazed pastures and within-site heterogeneity in soil moisture at local scale, and a high diversity of land cover types at the landscape scale affected ant species composition by promoting nest densities. Ant community evenness was high in wetter grasslands with low within-site variability in soil moisture and surrounded by a less diverse landscape. Fourth-corner models revealed that ant community structure response to environmental heterogeneity was mediated mainly by worker size, colony size, and life history traits related with colony reproduction and foundation. We discuss how withinsite local variability in soil moisture and low-intensity grazing promote ant species densities, and highlight the role of habitat temperature and humidity in affecting community evenness. We hypothesize that a higher diversity of land cover types in a forest-dominated landscape buffers less favorable environmental conditions for ant species establishment and dispersal between grasslands. We conclude that spatial environmental heterogeneity at local and landscape scales plays an important role as a deterministic force in filtering ant species and, along with neutral processes (e.g. stochastic colonization), in shaping ant community structure in temperate semi-natural upland grasslands.

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