1. Red wood Ants (Formica rufa-group) prefer mature pine forests in Variscan granite environments (Hymenoptera: Formicidae).
- Author
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BERBERICH, Gabriele M., BERBERICH, Martin B., and GIBHARDT, Matthias
- Subjects
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FIRE ants , *ANTS , *GRANITE , *HYMENOPTERA , *TREE age , *PINE - Abstract
We used presence/absence data of 5,160 red wood ant nests (RWA; Formica polyctena) acquired in a systematic large-scale area-wide survey in two study areas (â350 ha) in the Oberpfalz, NE Bavaria, Germany to explore for the first time the influence of variable (e.g., forest type, tree age) and quasi-invariant factors (e.g., tectonics, geochemical composition of the bedrock) on nest size and spatial distribution for Variscan granites. A combination of the forest type (mature pine-dominated forests (â80-140 years) as main variable factor and the geochemical property of the Variscan granites with their high natural Radon potential and moderate heat production as main quasi-invariant factor could explain the high nest numbers in both study areas. In addition, the spatially clustered distribution patterns of the observed nests suggest a strong interaction between nests and their quasi-invariant environment, especially the directionality of the present-day stress field and the direction of the tectonically formed "Erbendorfer Line". In general, such a combination of variable and quasi-invariant factors can be addressed as particularly favorable RWA habitats. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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