4.6 Article

Assessing the Australian Termite Diversity Anomaly: How Habitat and Rainfall Affect Termite Assemblages

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出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fevo.2021.657444

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Isoptera; community assembly; ecosystem engineers; Blattodea; termite community assembly; carbon cycle; Australian tropical forest; savanna

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资金

  1. National Science Foundation through an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship [DEB: 1655759, 2019282279]
  2. George Washington University Department of Biological Sciences

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Termites are important ecosystem engineers in tropical habitats, typically increasing in abundance and species diversity with higher rainfall levels. However, in the Australian tropics, the pattern is reversed, with lower species richness and termite abundance in rainforests compared to drier habitats. This anomaly may be driven by specific feeding groups colonizing habitats differently across Australia, with implications for ecosystem processes like carbon and nutrient cycling.
Termites are important ecosystem engineers in tropical habitats, with different feeding groups able to decompose wood, grass, litter, and soil organic matter. In most tropical regions, termite abundance and species diversity are assumed to increase with rainfall, with highest levels found in rainforests. However, in the Australian tropics, this pattern is thought to be reversed, with lower species richness and termite abundance found in rainforest than drier habitats. The potential mechanisms underlying this pattern remain unclear. We compared termite assemblages (abundance, activity, diversity, and feeding group composition) across five sites along a precipitation gradient (ranging from similar to 800 to 4,000 mm annual rainfall), spanning dry and wet savanna habitats, wet sclerophyll, and lowland and upland rainforests in tropical North Queensland. Moving from dry to wet habitats, we observed dramatic decreases in termite abundance in both mounds and dead wood occupancy, with greater abundance and activity at savanna sites (low precipitation) compared with rainforest or sclerophyll sites (high precipitation). We also observed a turnover in termite species and feeding group diversity across sites that were close together, but in different habitats. Termite species and feeding group richness were highest in savanna sites, with 13 termite species from wood-, litter-, grass-, dung-, and soil-feeding groups, while only five termite species were encountered in rainforest and wet sclerophyll sites-all wood feeders. These results suggest that the Australian termite diversity anomaly may be partly driven by how specific feeding groups colonized habitats across Australia. Consequently, termites in Australian rainforests may be less important in ecosystem processes, such as carbon and nutrient cycling during decomposition, compared with termites in other tropical rainforests.

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