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Journal ArticleDOI

Selective Foraging on Ants by a Terrestrial Polymorphic Salamander

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TLDR
The findings suggest selective foraging may be more common among generalist predators than previously considered, and it is proposed striped and unstriped morphs may represent a trophic polymorphism in P. cinereus.
Abstract
Numerous authors have studied the diet of the Eastern Red-backed Salamander (Plethodon cinereus) and have described this species as a generalist predator of invertebrates. In most studies, prey taxa are identified to the family or order level. Additionally, few studies have directly assessed dietary preference by comparing diet to available prey. We chose an important component of the diet of red-backed salamanders (ants) to test whether salamanders altered their diets temporally and to determine if salamanders preyed on a subset of available ant prey. We identified ant species in salamander diets over a 13 mo period. In the fall season we also compared ants in stomach contents to those available in the surrounding leaf litter to determine if territorial residents of P. cinereus selectively forage on different ant species. We found significant temporal differences in ant species incorporated in the diet of P. cinereus that were consistent with our detailed examination of salamander ant preference...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Field Guide to the Ants of New England. By Aaron M. Ellison, Nicholas J. Gotelli, Elizabeth J. Farnsworth, and Gary D. Alpert. New Haven (Connecticut): Yale University Press. $29.95 (flexibound). xvii + 398 p.; ill.; index. ISBN: 978-0-300-16930-0. 2012.

TL;DR: The authors merge their abilities as evolutionary, ecological, and behavioral biologists with their own taxonomic training and encounters with ants to instruct readers how to find what they are looking for and identify what they have found, aided by extensive line drawings, distribution maps, high-resolution digital images, and quality color photographs from their own portfolios.
Journal ArticleDOI

Feeding habits and multifunctional classification of soil‐associated consumers from protists to vertebrates

TL;DR: A comprehensive review of the feeding habits of consumers in soil, including protists, micro-, meso- and macrofauna (invertebrates), and soil-associated vertebrates is provided, and an overarching classification across taxa focusing on key universal traits such as food resource preferences, body masses, microhabitat specialisation, protection and hunting mechanisms is compiled.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluating within-population variability in behavior and demography for the adaptive potential of a dispersal-limited species to climate change.

TL;DR: Adaptive capacity in Plethodon cinereus, a dispersal‐limited woodland salamander, is assessed and phenological shifts and changes in growth rates are suggested under scenarios where further warming occurs, and possible adaptive strategies for resulting selective pressures are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Niche partitioning along the diet axis in a colour polymorphic population of Eastern Red-backed Salamanders, Plethodon cinereus

TL;DR: Compared the diets of striped and unstriped P. cinereus over a range of seasonal conditions to better understand if the reported differences observed in the fall season at the authors' field site remain consistent through the active season of this species.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Ecology of Individuals: Incidence and Implications of Individual Specialization

TL;DR: The collection of case studies suggests that individual specialization is a widespread but underappreciated phenomenon that poses many important but unanswered questions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ant biodiversity and its relationship to ecosystem functioning: a review

TL;DR: The role of ants in ecosystems is discussed in this article, mainly from the perspective of the effects of ground-dwelling ants on soil processes and function, emphasizing their role as ecosystem engineers.
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Evolutionary significance of resource polymorphisms in fishes, amphibians, and birds

TL;DR: Resource polymorphism in vertebrates is generally underappreciated as a diversifying force and is probably more common than is currently recognized, and the genetic basis may be simple, in some cases under the control of a single locus.
Journal ArticleDOI

Salamander populations and biomass in the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest, New Hampshire

Thomas M. Burton, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1975 - 
TL;DR: There were about 2950 salamanders per ha (1770 g/ha wet wt) in the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest in New Hampshire, which is about twice that of birds during the bird's peak (breeding) season and is about equal to the biomass of small mammals.
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