Title: The Abisko Ant (Formica exsecta )
1The Abisko Ant(Formica exsecta )
- Can the presence and abundancy of ant hills be
predicted by looking at characteristics of the
area
2(No Transcript)
3Introduction
- The Abisko Ant Formica exsecta (or Narrow-headed
wood ant) - Nests found at open heath land or moorland as
well as scrub and forest clearings - Nests are smaller than at other species (30x30
cm) and are partly under the ground - Nests made of vegetation fragments, in Abisko
mainly Andromeda and Equisetum - Dinner other insects or honey dew
4Introduction
- For Formica exsecta, much research is done on
subjects like sex-ratios, but not on variables
that are important for population bigness. So not
much is known about that except for this common
knowledge. - But with this knowledge you would expect that you
could predict the presence and abundancy of ant
hills by looking at characteristics of the area
(vegetation to build nests, other insects for
food, enough room for building underground, etc.
)
5Hypothese
- In Abisko, you have open moorland with High, Low
and No population of Ant nests - We expect that this is the result of that Ants
choose their area by looking at characteristics
of the area - Thereby
- We expect that there is a correlation between the
characteristics of the area and the occurrence of
the ants
6Methods
- Flora
- Fauna
- Soil-depth
- C/N-ratio
- pH
- Temperature
- Soil Moisture
7Methods
- Flora
- Braun-Blanquet scale
- 1 plot near each hill
- 40x40 cm
- No visible influence of the ants
- Close enough to predict the same characteristics
at the real ant spot - Fauna
- 1 Pitt-Fall at each hill in same plot
- Fauna determination counting
8Methods
- Soil depth
- Measure depth
- 5 times at each plot
- Random places
- C/N ratio
- Take 1 soil sample at each plot
- Standard procedure
9Methods
- pH
- 1 soil sample at each plot
- Extraction of liquid with centrifuge
- Standard pH measurement
- Temperature
- 5 times at each plot
- Random places
- Soil Moisture
- 1 soil sample at each plot
- (total weight - dry weight)/ total weight
10Methods
- We used ANOVAs to look to the variance of the
characteristics of the plots within the areas
and between the areas
11Results Flora
12Results Fauna
13Results Soil Depth
Sum of Squares df Mean Square F Sig.
Between Groups 144.649 2 72.324 .516 .621
Within Groups 841.787 6 140.298
Total 986.436 8
14Results C/N-ratio
Sum of Squares df Mean Square F Sig.
Between Groups 1301.238 2 650.619 .500 .630
Within Groups 7800.821 6 1300.137
Total 9102.060 8
15Results pH
Sum of Squares df Mean Square F Sig.
Between Groups .280 2 .140 .112 .895
Within Groups 7.465 6 1.244
Total 7.745 8
16Results Temperature
Sum of Squares df Mean Square F Sig.
Between Groups .740 2 .370 1.708 .259
Within Groups 1.300 6 .217
Total 2.040 8
17Results Soil Moisture
Sum of Squares df Mean Square F Sig.
Between Groups .000 2 .000 .037 .964
Within Groups .018 6 .003
Total .018 8
18Discussion Results
- Flora ? much variation in areas themselves
- ? variation between also great, but not
significant - Fauna ? much variation in the areas and between
the areas - ? No significant result
- Soil depth ? high variation in areas, but smaller
between areas - No significant result
- C/N ratio ? C/N ratio lower in ant-areas than in
control - ? not significant because of high in-area
variation
19Discussion Results
- pH ? no singificant difference between areas
- Temperature ? Area with high-ant abundancy has
lower - temperature, but not significant
- Soil moisture ? little difference between areas
- ? variation in control area greater than in
ant areas
20Discussion
- The settlement and abundance of ants (hills)
doesnt seem related to the research variables - The depth is very variable due to the fact that
the terrain below the soil is rocky. - Maybe sunlight (and related place on the mountain
side) and enough food resources are more
important - More research is necessary.
21Discussion
- Fauna has much in-group variation
- Too few fauna samples due to too little pitfalls
- Pitfalls could have had more result if they could
stand for an extended period of time - Other catching methods?
- Vegetation has much in-group variation.
- Possible solution? taking more samples per area
to average (power problem) - C/N ratio has much in-group variation.
- Possible solution? taking more samples to average
C/N ratio per area (power problem)
22Discussion
- Variance within areas looks like a factor that
might be important, but too few freedom degrees
to proof something - Maybe Ants don't care about the characteristics,
its known that ants in a certain amount can
create there own environment en maintain moist
and temperature within the nests and the
population answer must be searched in other
explanations like relation - we looked at random locations within the control
area, but ants might only look at the unsuitable
border of a terrain - At last, the examined plots could differ from the
real plots, but it is impossible to look at the
former characteristics
23Take Home Message
- No significant results found
- Settlement and abundance of ants isnt related to
soil depth, pH, soil temperature, soil moisture - (although variance might be a factor)
- Settlement of ants can be related to flora and
fauna, but more samples are needed - Other area characteristics or totally other
explanations might be important - So better and more research!
24Time to rest!
25Credits
- Deze powerpoint is gemaakt door
- David van Diepen
- Kijk voor meer powerpoints op
- www.davidvandiepen.nl
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op mijn gastenboek!