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Journal ArticleDOI

The Effect of Shade and Competition on Emigration Rate in the Ant Aphaenogaster Rudis

Judith Smallwood, +1 more
- 01 Feb 1982 - 
- Vol. 63, Iss: 1, pp 124-134
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TLDR
Field and laboratory experiments were conducted to determine if competition or reduced nest insolation, which acts to reduce internal nest temperature, could act as cues triggering colony emigrations, and the effect of increased food supply and artificial shade on the emigration rate.
Abstract
Aphaenogaster rudis is a common ant in eastern United States forests that exhibits a high rate of colony relocation to new nest sites, even in the absence of nest disturbances. Field and laboratory experiments were conducted to determine if competition or reduced nest insolation, which acts to reduce internal nest temperature, could act as cues triggering colony emigrations. The field experiments tested the effect of increased food supply and artificial shade on the emigration rate. Laboratory experiments tested the effect of increased aggressive encounters with another ant species on emigration rate. Reduction in nest insolation resulted in a dramatic increase in the probability of emigration. Competition resulted in nest relocations only when it involved the invasion of the A. rudis nest site by another ant species. Changes in the amount of available food had no demonstrable effect on the probability of relocation although such changes did affect the intensity and direction of foraging activity. Seasonal trends in emigratory behavior were also observed. Emigration rate in A. rudis reached a maximum in midsummer. Also, the effect of artificially shading nests on emigration rate was the greatest in early summer and significantly less in spring and late summer.

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Citations
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Ecology of Seed Dispersal

TL;DR: A general objective of this paper is to explore the degree to which dispersal process and mode are integrated and, in so doing, to catalyze their union.
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Community structure in north temperate ants: temporal and spatial variation.

TL;DR: Ant communities in Vermont and New York woods were sampled in four time periods to determine species composition, relative abundances, and nest locations in space, suggesting that a single resource was mediating competition.
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Mechanisms of dispersed central-place foraging in polydomous colonies of the Argentine ant.

TL;DR: Assessment of mechanisms involved in dispersed central-place foraging in polydomous colonies of the Argentine ant Linepithema humile found that this highly flexible system of allocating nests, workers and brood throughout a colony's foraging area potentially increases foraging efficiency and competitive ability.
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Uncommon specialization in a mutualism between a temperate herbaceous plant guild and an ant: are Aphaenogaster ants keystone mutualists?

TL;DR: The meta-analysis demonstrated that A. rudis is the primary seed dispersal vector for most of this rich temperate ant-dispersed flora, and the low levels of plant partner diversity for myrmecochores demonstrated here rivals that of tropical ant-plants (myrmecophytes) and well exceeds that typically observed in temperate plant-frugivore and plant-pollinator mutualisms and myRMecochory in other biomes.
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Importance of elaiosome size to removal of ant-dispersed seeds.

TL;DR: This study is the first one to relate intraspecific variation in claiosome size to removal of diaspores by ants to circumvents the problem posed by interspecific variation in chemistry and morphology of elaiosomes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

An Ordination of the Upland Forest Communities of Southern Wisconsin

TL;DR: It is shown that nature of unit variation is a naajor problenl in systematies, and that whether this variation is diserete, continuous, or in some other form, there is a need for appliGation of (uantitative and statistical methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence for the existence of three primary strategies in plants and its relevance to ecological and evolutionary theory

TL;DR: A triangular model based upon the three strategies of evolution in plants may be reconciled with the theory of r- and K-selection, provides an insight into the processes of vegetation succession and dominance, and appears to be capable of extension to fungi and to animals.
Book

The Insect Societies

TL;DR: In this article, a definitive study of the social structure and symbiotic relationships of termites, social wasps, bees, and ants was conducted. But the authors focused on the relationship between ants and termites.
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