The overall distribution of Linepithema humile, introduced about a hundred years ago and now widespread in western and southern Portugal, has not notably changed in the last forty years. The ant is particularly common in sand and in clay loam soils but, inexplicably and despite otherwise favourable conditions, is largely absent in adjoining easterly mostly sandy loam soils associated with metamorphic rocks. In these circumstances there was a striking change in transition areas from exclusive dominance by L. humile to exclusive dominance by the competing native species, Crematogaster scutellaris and Pheidole pallidula, which was directly associated with the change in soil type. In a site with a particular sandy loam soil type (Vt) comprising adjoining patches colonized either by L. humile or native ants, the former occurred where there was a greater sand content. In oak planted sandy and Vt soils L. humile was present in cultivated or grazed ground but was replaced by C. scutellaris when there was well established scrub and ground vegetation. There was intense fighting at a transition line in one place with uniform tree and ground vegetation that supported large populations of L. humile and of native dominants on opposite sides of the transition. Here, the former had spread about 30 m per year between 1993 and 1996 compared with an estimated 800 m per year in the first 60 years after introduction. It is concluded that the dominant native C. scutellaris and P. pallidula in their favoured plantation habitats, and T. nigerrimum and T. hispanicum in some arable and pasture habitats can delay or prevent spread of L. humile in soils and vegetation conditions that also suit it. Although L. humile was present in most valley floors, its presence and abundance were not significantly related to valley conditions, and it was sometimes abundant at the tops of adjoining hillsides and in seasonally water-deficient sandy areas. Its association with some built-up areas was strikingly displayed by abundance in a town on inimical metamorphic-based soils that were uncolonized in immediately adjoining vegetationally favourable plantation and agricultural land. The direct and indirect effects of soil type on L. humile are analysed and discussed. Three habitats largely free of human interference -sand dunes with native trees and bare areas, a similarly patchily vegetated rocky river gorge and an eroded arête -may exemplify natural conditions exploited by L. humile in its native South America.
An ecological survey of the ant fauna of the southern part of the Junggar Basin and adjacent mountains, Xinjiang, China, revealed 46 species of which 27 (59%) were new records for China. Most of the species are widespread and no endemics were found. A largely boreal fauna occupies the spruce forest zone at high elevations of the Tienshan Mountains, giving way, lower down, in elm forest, to a mixed, but primarily mesic temperate fauna. Loess desert and degraded steppe at mid-elevations and in the foothills are overgrazed and have only a few species that elsewhere occur in temperate mesic and/or steppic habitats. The sandy deserts and poplar woodlands of the arid Junggar Basin have a fauna characteristic of deserts and steppes. The salt desert fauna has a strange mixture of a number of elements.
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