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      Surface roughness affects the running speed of tropical canopy ants

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          Explaining the abundance of ants in lowland tropical rainforest canopies.

          The extraordinary abundance of ants in tropical rainforest canopies has led to speculation that numerous arboreal ant taxa feed principally as "herbivores" of plant and insect exudates. Based on nitrogen (N) isotope ratios of plants, known herbivores, arthropod predators, and ants from Amazonia and Borneo, we find that many arboreal ant species obtain little N through predation and scavenging. Microsymbionts of ants and their hemipteran trophobionts might play key roles in the nutrition of taxa specializing on N-poor exudates. For plants, the combined costs of biotic defenses and herbivory by ants and tended Hemiptera are substantial, and forest losses to insect herbivores vastly exceed current estimates.
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            The Ecology and Evolution of Ant-Plant Interactions

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              Thermal adaptation generates a diversity of thermal limits in a rainforest ant community.

              The Thermal Adaptation Hypothesis posits that the warmer, aseasonal tropics generates populations with higher and narrower thermal limits. It has largely been tested among populations across latitudes. However, considerable thermal heterogeneity exists within ecosystems: across 31 trees in a Panama rainforest, surfaces exposed to sun were 8 °C warmer and varied more in temperature than surfaces in the litter below. Tiny ectotherms are confined to surfaces and are variously submerged in these superheated boundary layer environments. We quantified the surface CTmin and CTmax s (surface temperatures at which individuals grew torpid and lost motor control, respectively) of 88 ant species from this forest; they ranged in average mass from 0.01 to 57 mg. Larger ants had broader thermal tolerances. Then, for 26 of these species we again tested body CTmax s using a thermal dry bath to eliminate boundary layer effects: body size correlations observed previously disappeared. In both experiments, consistent with Thermal Adaptation, CTmax s of canopy ants averaged 3.5-5 °C higher than populations that nested in the shade of the understory. We impaled thermocouples in taxidermy mounts to further quantify the factors shaping operative temperatures for four ant species representing the top third (1-30 mg) of the size distribution. Extrapolations suggest the smallest 2/3rds of species reach thermal equilibrium in <10s. Moreover, the large ants that walk above the convective superheated surface air also showed more net heating by solar radiation, with operative temperatures up to 4 °C higher than surrounding air. The thermal environments of this Panama rainforest generate a range of CTmax subsuming 74% of those previously recorded for ant populations worldwide. The Thermal Adaptation Hypothesis can be a powerful tool in predicting diversity of thermal limits within communities. Boundary layer temperatures are likely key to predicting the future of Earth's tiny terrestrial ectotherm populations.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Biotropica
                Biotropica
                Wiley
                0006-3606
                1744-7429
                January 2017
                July 22 2016
                January 2017
                : 49
                : 1
                : 92-100
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Biology University of Louisville 139 Life Sciences Building Louisville KY 40292 U.S.A.
                [2 ]Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Apartado Postal 0843‐03092 Panamá Republic of Panama
                [3 ]Department of Biological Sciences University of Arkansas Fayetteville AR 72701 U.S.A.
                [4 ]Department of Geology and Geography Georgia Southern University Statesboro GA 30460 U.S.A.
                [5 ]Departments of Geography and Plant &amp; Soil Sciences University of Delaware Newark DE 19716 U.S.A.
                Article
                10.1111/btp.12349
                8b4e0938-b56b-46a8-8472-589968d0f82a
                © 2017

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#am

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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