2022
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-16243-x
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Urban tropical forest islets as hotspots of ants in general and invasive ants in particular

Abstract: Urbanization is a crucial driver of environmental and biodiversity change. It is suggested that urbanization favours generalist and invasive species and might harm specialists of natural and semi-natural habitats. In this study, we examined how an urbanization gradient and environmental gradients in the habitat area, habitat diversity, elevation, and proportion of built-up area influenced the abundance and richness of ants within tropical forest islet habitat in south India. We used abundance (proportional tra… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(1 citation statement)
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References 67 publications
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“…In general, urbanization tends to select smaller arthropods for survival, except for winged arthropods, which require dispersal across a fragmented habitat in urban areas (McIntyre, 2000;Kotze et al, 2011;Merckx et al, 2018a;Merckx et al, 2018b;Magura et al, 2020). However, for ants, not all species are equally affected by urbanization, as some forest ants with larger body-size are highly adaptable to the harsh urban environment (Peng et al, 2020;Rajesh et al, 2022).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In general, urbanization tends to select smaller arthropods for survival, except for winged arthropods, which require dispersal across a fragmented habitat in urban areas (McIntyre, 2000;Kotze et al, 2011;Merckx et al, 2018a;Merckx et al, 2018b;Magura et al, 2020). However, for ants, not all species are equally affected by urbanization, as some forest ants with larger body-size are highly adaptable to the harsh urban environment (Peng et al, 2020;Rajesh et al, 2022).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%