Canopy connectivity influences foraging, dispersal, and competition in arboreal ant
species, with implications for ant community assembly. Connectivity among the crowns of shade
trees varies greatly with agricultural intensification in agroforestry systems, where some ant
species have been shown to act as biological control agents against agricultural pests.
Understanding how canopy connectivity affects arboreal ant communities could aid in the
development of management practices that maximize biological control services from arboreal
ant species. I used a manipulation of connectivity between the crowns of large shade trees to
investigate the effects of canopy connectivity on arboreal ant species richness, composition, and
co-occurrence rates in a coffee agroecosystem. Further, I examined the effects of the major
dominant arboreal ant species, Azteca sericeasur, on ant species density and composition on
trunks and crowns of upper shade trees.
A linear mixed-effects analysis showed that the number of species observed at baits set in
tree crowns increased significantly after the crowns had been connected with nylon ropes (p =
0.028). In trees occupied by A. sericeasur , lower numbers of species were observed at baits even
in the crown (p = 0.067). Crowns that were connected increased in similarity of ant species
composition, particularly between adjacent connected crowns. Composition also significantly
differed between both trunks (P = 0.003) and crowns (P = 0.014) that contained A. sericeasur
nests and those that did not. Overall C-scores combined with an analysis of co-occurrence rates
of individual pairs of species indicate that this arboreal ant community is not characterized by
high rates of segregation, and pairwise competitive interactions are not among the most
important forces structuring community assembly here.
In timed observations of connecting lines between tree crowns, only arboreal-nesting ant
species were recorded, reinforcing the idea that canopy connections are most significant to
strictly arboreal species. Connectivity may increase the number of species present in tree crowns
by allowing ants to disperse and forage in the canopy while bypassing trunks with more
aggressive, territorial species. While the keystone ant A. sericeasur makes heavy use of
connections within lower vegetative strata, I found that other species, such as twig-nesting
species, are more likely to make use of connections in the canopy above 11 m. Because some
twig-nesting species in the upper crown have been shown to act as biological control agents, an
increase in species density in tree crowns could have positive implications for agricultural pest
control services.Master of ScienceSchool for Environment and SustainabilityUniversity of Michiganhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/150643/1/MacDougal_fern_Thesis.pd