C. D Yodé, K. Dosso, L. MM Kouakou, K. Yeo, W. Dekoninck, S. Konate, and P. K Kouassi (2020)
Evaluating Efficiency of Different Sampling Methods for Arboreal Ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) in A West African Forest-Savanna Mosaic
Sociobiology, 67(4):492-500.
Ants constitute an important part of arboreal arthropod biomass in rainforests.
Nevertheless, there are only a few methods which permit a rapid assessment of
these insects in the canopy layer. This study aims at evaluating the efficiency of
a new variant type of pitfall trap i.e. “the funnel trap”, to sample arboreal ants in
a secondary and gallery forest in Lamto reserve (Côte d’Ivoire). This method was
compared to standard arboreal pitfall trap and beating. In total, the 3 methods
yielded 7072 ant workers belonging to 43 species, 14 genera and 5 subfamilies.
Tree beating recorded the highest ant’s numerical abundance (3670 workers), with
27 species, 12 genera and 3 subfamilies followed by the “funnel trap” that yielded
2800 ant workers, with 23 species belonging to 12 genera and 5 subfamilies. Finally,
arboreal pitfall traps caught the lowest individual with 602 ant workers from 20
species belonging to 9 genera and 3 subfamilies. The composition of species which
are caught by arboreal pitfall trap and “funnel trap” was similar at 53 percent. Tree
beating showed a distinct species composition compared to arboreal pitfall trap
and “funnel trap”. The “funnel trap” could be a fast and efficient way to quickly
assess ant-biodiversity in forest canopies and agroecosystems as it looks like a nondestructive sampling method.
Pitfall trap, “funnel” trap, Lamto reserve,, biodiversity, habitat structure, tree canopy.
- DOI: 10.13102/sociobiology.v67i4.5558
- ISSN: 0361-6525
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