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Lasius

About: Lasius is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 602 publications have been published within this topic receiving 13846 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this review, the term "mutualism" is defined as an association between ants and other insects which is mutually beneficial without neces­ sarily implying obligate dependence or interdependence.
Abstract: Nixon ( 107) , in a detailed survey of the literature on the relations of ants with aphids and coccids showed that until the year 1948 comparatively few critical studies had been made on the nature of the association and on the value of the different benefits received by each partner. He concluded that the evidence did not justify many of the exaggerated claims of a spe­ cial bond uniting the partners to their mutual advantage and, except in a few instances, he questioned the apparent benefits derived by the associated species. Outstanding contributions by Van der Goot ( 136) , Biinzli (27) , and Herzig (65) have now been supplemented by recent experimental work especially on aphids associated with Lasius and Formica spp., and on Pseudococcidae and Coccidae associated with Iridomyrmez humilis Mayr and Oecophylla spp. These ants and their associated Homoptera exemplify different forms of mutualism and are discussed in more detail than are other species. The review is also selective because it is limited to certain controversial topics, namely, adaptations of Homoptera related to their association with ants, benefits derived by the Homoptera, contribution of Homoptera to the food supply of ants, specificity in the ant-Homoptera as­ sociation, and the ant-Homoptera association in relation to their natural control. In this review, the term "mutualism" is defined as an association be­ tween ants and other insects which is mutually beneficial without neces­ sarily implying obligate dependence or interdependence. Myrmecophilous species are those which benefit from ants and are more or less adapted to live with them in a relationship which need not be either obligatory or mutually beneficial.

913 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The selection of the path is shown to be a collective process whereby trail laying and following amplifies small initial differences in the traffic on each path caused by these three mechanisms, and the foragers show no significant tendency to follow the path they used previously.

431 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Feb 1988-Oikos
TL;DR: Expectations for the nest-distribution pattern of ant species in the late successional habitats of the boreal taiga biome are tested with bait experiments and nest mapping, and the results are modelled by multiway contingency tables.
Abstract: Differences in social organization and behaviour rank ant species into a competition hierarchy (starting with superior competitors): territorials (e.g., the Formica rufa -group red wood ants), encounterers (e.g. Camponotus, Lasius niger), and submissives (e.g., Formica fusca). Territorials and encounterers behave aggressively against individuals of alien colonies; these species are not expected to cooccur. Submissives behave recessively and may coexist with stronger species, but their forager numbers and nest densities should decrease. If such small-scale behavioural processes structure the ant community, predictable larger-scale nest-distribution pattern of the species is expected. We tested the expectations with bait experiments and nest mapping, and modelled the results by multiway contingency tables. Submissives showed complementary abundances with territorials in terms of forager numbers on the baits, and their nest densities within the territory increased toward its periphery. Pressure by territorial and encounter species on the baits caused the submissive species to shift from protein to carbohydrate. Territorials and encounterers had complementary occurrences on the baits. The nests of territorials were far apart, with only occasional nests of encounter species at the outskirts of the territory. In the late successional habitats of the boreal taiga biome superior territorial competitors, especially the polycalic red wood ant species, assume the role of organizing centers of ant species assemblages.

407 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Ant distribution and behavioural dominance is examined at nine sites along an elevational gradient in south eastern Arizona in order to classify North American species according to a functional group scheme used extensively in Australia, and for comparing community structure between Australia and North America.
Abstract: Ant distribution and behavioural dominance is examined at nine sites along an elevational gradient (1400–2600 m) in south eastern Arizona, in order to classify North American species according to a functional group scheme used extensively in Australia. The functional groups are then used as a basis for determining patterns of community structure along the environmental gradient, and for comparing community structure between Australia and North America. Quantitative information on species com- position was obtained from pitfall traps, and patterns of ant abundance at tuna baits were used to determine relative behavioural dominance among taxa. A total of eighty-three species from twenty-eight genera was recorded along the elevational gradient, with site species richness ranging from four (high elevation Douglas fir forest) to thirty-three (mid elevation oak–juniper woodland). There was a strong correlation between ant abundance and richness, which was not an artefact of sampling intensity. The most common ants were species of Forelius, Monomorium, Crematogaster and Pheidole at the three desert sites, species of Formica, Pheidole and Crematogaster at the three woodland sites, and species of Prenolepis and Formica at one forest site. No species were abundant at two other forest sites. The most common species in traps also tended to be the most common species at baits. In terms of behavioural dominance, highly competitive ants included species of Solenopsis, Forelius, Monomorium and Liometopum. Species of Pheidole and Crematogaster tended to be moderately competitive, whereas species of Dory- myrmex, Myrmica, Camponotus and Formica (fusca gp) had low competitive ability. On the basis of these results and on published records of other taxa, North American ants were assigned to functional groups as follows (major taxa only given here): Dominant Dolichoderinae—Forelius, Liome- topum; Subordinate Camponotini—Camponotus; Hot Climate Specialists—Pogonomyrmex, Myrmecocystus; Cold Climate Specialists—Formica (rufa, exsecta and microgyna groups), Leptothorax, Stenamma, Lasius, Prenolepis; Cryptic Species—Smithistruma, Solenopsis (subgenus Diplorhop- trum), Acanthomyops; Opportunists—Formica (fusca group), Myrmica, Paratrechina, Dorymyrmex; Generalized Myr- micinae—Pheidole, Crematogaster, Monomorium; Specialist Predators—no major taxa. Functional group composition varied systematically along the elevation gradient: Dominant Dolichoderinae, Generalized MyrAmicinae and Hot Climate Specialists were predominant at desert sites; Generalized Myrmicinae and Opportunists were predominant at woodland sites; and Opportunists and Cold Climate Specialists were predominant at forest sites. These patterns are consistent with published studies from elsewhere in North America. Almost all North American taxa can be matched with what appear to be ecologically equivalent taxa in Australia, and biogeographic patterns of functional group composition are broadly similar across the two continents. The major differences are that Australian ant communities are far richer in species, and are almost always dominated by dolichoderines, particularly species of Iridomyrmex. Generalized myrmicines are subdominant to dolichoderines in Australia, but are the behaviourally dominant ants throughout the warmer parts of North America. In cool-temperate North America, species of Formica (especially rufa and exsecta groups) are behaviourally dominant, as they are throughout the Palearctic. Some major features of the North American fauna can be linked to its poor representation of Dominant Dolichoderinae, including (1) the relatively low degree of physiological, morphological and behavioural specialization of Hot Climate Specialists; (2) behavioural dominance by formicines in cool-temperate habitats; and (3) the susceptibility to invasion by behaviourally dominant species such as the imported fire ant Solenopsis invicta and the Argentine ant Linepithema humile.

359 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Simulations of this model showed that the observed modulation of trail laying with respect to food source quality is sufficient in itself to account for the systematic selection of the richer source seen in the experiments.
Abstract: Foragers of the ant Lasius nigerexploiting a 1 Msugar source were found to lay 43 %more trail marks than those exploiting a 0.05 or a 0.1 Msource. The trail laying per forager decreased during the course of individual recruitment episodes, and the mean lifetime of the trail pheromone was estimated to be 47 min. A mathematical function describing the probability that a forager chooses one of two paths in relation to the amount of trail pheromone on them closely fitted experimental data. These results were incorporated into a model describing the recruitment dynamics of L. niger.Simulations of this model showed that the observed modulation of trail laying with respect to food source quality is sufficient in itself to account for the systematic selection of the richer source seen in the experiments.

267 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202311
202236
202126
202021
201914
201818