2008
DOI: 10.1590/s0031-10492008002800001
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Subterranean ants (Hymenoptera, Formicidae) as prey of fossorial reptiles (Reptilia, Squamata: Amphisbaenidae) in Central Brazil

Abstract: The ant diversity observed in stomach contents of fossorial reptiles was compared to the

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Cited by 3 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Alternatively, A. vermicularis might show less fossoriality than initially thought and its survival be affected by refuge availability. The scarce data available on the diet of A. vermicularis inform individuals foraging either on the surface (Aragão et al, 2019) or having surface-dwelling ants as prey (Esteves et al, 2008), which, in concern with the species countershading color pattern, suggest some level of surface activity (Gans, 1968).…”
Section: The Probability Of Urotomy Increases With Body Size Inmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Alternatively, A. vermicularis might show less fossoriality than initially thought and its survival be affected by refuge availability. The scarce data available on the diet of A. vermicularis inform individuals foraging either on the surface (Aragão et al, 2019) or having surface-dwelling ants as prey (Esteves et al, 2008), which, in concern with the species countershading color pattern, suggest some level of surface activity (Gans, 1968).…”
Section: The Probability Of Urotomy Increases With Body Size Inmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition to systematic leaf litter sampling and hand collecting, the examination of stomach contents of leaf-litter foraging amphibians is a valuable source of cryptic and rarely collected ant species (Weber 1938, Delsinne and Fernández 2012, Sosa-Calvo 2015). Many species of amphibians and non-avian reptiles specialize on ant feeding and some species are predominantly myrmecophagous (Solé et al 2002, Darst et al 2005, Esteves et al 2008). In the Neotropical poison frog family Dendrobatidae, myrmecophagy evolved at least twice, possibly three times independently (Santos et al 2003, Darst et al 2005), and the frogs sequester the skin alkaloids mostly from their ant and mite diet (McGugan et al 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…4). Many amphibians, including species of the aposematic poison frogs in the family Dendrobatidae, and non-avian reptiles are known to be specialized predators of ants (Weber 1938, Darst et al 2005, Esteves et al 2008, Sosa-Calvo 2015), and therefore they provide interesting sources of rarely collected and new arthropod species. Dendrobatid poison frogs sequester alkaloids that are found in their skin toxins from their diet (Daly et al 2000, Saporito et al 2004, 2007, Darst et al 2005, McGugan et al 2016), and therefore we briefly discuss the ecology of the specialized ant feeding behavior, or myrmecophagy, of dendrobatid frogs.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Riley et al ., ; Webb et al ., ; Kearney, ). The avoidance of ants in the diet is probably explained because, as it occurs in other amphisbaenians (López et al ., ; Esteves et al ., ), only a few species are consumed from those available, leading to a general avoidance of most ants found in the habitat. This may be explained by the difficulty of capturing the most aggressive ant species that can defend themselves very effectively and aggressively against amphisbaenians, especially if they are in groups (López & Martín, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nevertheless, the few studies that have examined availability of prey show that, in the amphisbaenian Blanus cinereus , the diet differs from what is available in the soil; amphisbaenians select insect larvae of larger size in higher proportion than their availability, and avoid some of the genera of ants available (López et al ., ). Also, other amphisbaenians select only a few species of ants from the rich diversity of available species (Esteves, Brandáo & Viegas, ). These data suggest that, in spite of the restrictions of fossorial life, amphisbaenians can discriminate and select different types of prey.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%