Meat ants as dominant members of Australian ant communities: an experimental test of their influence on the foraging success and forager abundance of other species.
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Disruption of foraging by a dominant invasive species to decrease its competitive abilityQuantifying ant activity using vibration measurements.Toxicity and utilization of chemical weapons: does toxicity and venom utilization contribute to the formation of species communities?Dispersal for distance? Acacia ligulata seeds and meat ants Iridomyrmex viridiaeneusThe effect of a dominant ant, Iridomyrmex purpureus, on resource use by ant assemblages depends on microhabitat and resource typeCommunity disassembly by an invasive species.Ant community structure in citrus orchards in the mediterranean basin: impoverishment as a consequence of habitat homogeneity.Field tests of interspecific competition in ant assemblages: revisiting the dominant red wood ants.Dominance and species co-occurrence in highly diverse ant communities: a test of the interstitial hypothesis and discovery of a three-tiered competition cascade.Experimental evidence that the introduced fire ant, Solenopsis invicta, does not competitively suppress co-occurring ants in a disturbed habitat.The effect of diet and opponent size on aggressive interactions involving caribbean crazy ants (Nylanderia fulva).Ants of three adjacent habitats of a transition region between the cerrado and caatinga biomes: the effects of heterogeneity and variation in canopy cover.The interacting effects of ungulate hoofprints and predatory native ants on metamorph cane toads in tropical Australia.Suppression of savanna ants alters invertebrate composition and influences key ecosystem processes.Soil disturbance effects on the composition of seed-dispersing ants in roadside environments.Removal and Burial of Weed Seeds by Ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) From the Soil Surface of a Cropped Area in Western Australia.Predicting community structure of ground-foraging ant assemblages with Markov models of behavioral dominance.Cryptic termites avoid predatory ants by eavesdropping on vibrational cues from their footsteps.Balancing building and maintenance costs in growing transport networks.Distinctive life traits and distribution along environmental gradients of dominant and subordinate Mediterranean ant species.Effect of tropical forest disturbance on the competitive interactions within a diverse ant community.Revision of the Iridomyrmex discors Species-group (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)Aggressive bodyguards are not always the best: Preferential interaction with more aggressive ant species reduces reproductive success of plant bearing extrafloral nectaries.From insinuator to dominator: Foraging switching by an exotic antBiodiversity responses to vegetation structure in a fragmented landscape: ant communities in a peri-urban coastal dune systemResource competition assays between the African big-headed ant,Pheidole megacephala(Fabricius) and the invasive Argentine ant,Linepithema humile(Mayr): mechanisms of inter-specific displacementLocal-scale spatial dynamics of ants in a temperate agroecosystemAssembly rules of ground-foraging ant assemblages are contingent on disturbance, habitat and spatial scaleHost ant use of the Alcon blue butterfly at the northern range marginIntraspecific Thievery in the AntEctatomma ruidumis Mediated by Food AvailabilityTrait-Mediated Indirect Effects of Phorid Flies on AntsImpact of Interference Competition on Exploration and Food Exploitation in the AntLasius niger
P2860
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P2860
Meat ants as dominant members of Australian ant communities: an experimental test of their influence on the foraging success and forager abundance of other species.
description
1994 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
1994年の論文
@ja
1994年学术文章
@wuu
1994年学术文章
@zh-cn
1994年学术文章
@zh-hans
1994年学术文章
@zh-my
1994年学术文章
@zh-sg
1994年學術文章
@yue
1994年學術文章
@zh
1994年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Meat ants as dominant members ...... er abundance of other species.
@ast
Meat ants as dominant members ...... er abundance of other species.
@en
type
label
Meat ants as dominant members ...... er abundance of other species.
@ast
Meat ants as dominant members ...... er abundance of other species.
@en
prefLabel
Meat ants as dominant members ...... er abundance of other species.
@ast
Meat ants as dominant members ...... er abundance of other species.
@en
P356
P1433
P1476
Meat ants as dominant members ...... er abundance of other species.
@en
P2093
P2888
P356
10.1007/BF00326085
P407
P577
1994-06-01T00:00:00Z