ANT COMMUNITIES IN FRAGMENTS OF OLD-GROWTH TAIGA AND MANAGED SURROUNDINGS

Citation
P. Punttila et al., ANT COMMUNITIES IN FRAGMENTS OF OLD-GROWTH TAIGA AND MANAGED SURROUNDINGS, Annales zoologici Fennici, 31(1), 1994, pp. 131-144
Citations number
88
Categorie Soggetti
Zoology
Journal title
ISSN journal
0003455X
Volume
31
Issue
1
Year of publication
1994
Pages
131 - 144
Database
ISI
SICI code
0003-455X(1994)31:1<131:ACIFOO>2.0.ZU;2-B
Abstract
The structure of ant communities was studied by sampling with pitfall traps in 24 mixed coniferous old-growth fragments (>140 yrs old), thei r edges, and managed surroundings of different ages in southern Finlan d. The old-forest ant community consisted of only three common shade-t olerant species, Formica aquilonia, Myrmica ruginodis and Camponotus h erculeanus, whereas most of the ant species inhabited the early stages of forest succession. The size of the fragment affected only slightly the ant community. The most common territorial wood ant, F. aquilonia , structured the ant community by suppressing other species, although not equally so. The ant-community structure in the context of forest s uccession and landscape structure is discussed, and the successions in managed forests compared to those occurring after more natural distur bances. Forestry has changed the dynamics of succession and structural characteristics of the forest stands. Important changes of the landsc ape affecting forest-ant species are age-distribution of the forests a nd the fragmentation of old-growth forests accompanied by an increased proportion of edge habitats: open-country species have gained a great er inhabitable area and the relative abundances of the territorial woo d-ant species (Formica s. str.) have changed. The multinest supercolon ies of F. aquilonia have decreased, whereas species such as F. lugubri s, which in our study area tend to be monodomous, have benefitted.