Biological Domino Effect - No Elephants = no Ants = No TreesUS ecologists have highlighted the delicate balance at work in Nature with a study showing that the disappearance of elephants has knock-on effects on ants and ultimately the survival of trees.
But once the large animals were excluded things began to change. The species of ants inhabiting the trees changed, and the ant colony sizes reduced dramatically. The trees also became less healthy, grew less fast and were more than twice as likely to die compared with normally grazed trees. So what provoked this dramatic change? The lack of grazing by elephants and other large animals resulted in the trees reducing their production of ant-incentives including the hollow thorns for them to live in and nectar rewards. Consequently the ants that would normally defend the trees, a species called Crematogaster mimosae, were lost and replaced with other ant species including one called Crematogaster sjostedti, which lives in cavities created in tree stems by long-horned beetles, which the ants themselves encourage to colonise the tree. But whilst it provides a home for the ants, the wood-weakening effects of the beetle larvae kills the trees. So, unpredictable as it would seem, if elephants and other large African mammals were to go extinct, trees and even ants would immediately suffer, highlighting the fragility and interdependence of every species in nature. 13th Jan 2008 |
||||
The contents of this site are © The Naked Scientists® 2000-2008. The Naked Scientists® and Naked Science® are registered trademarks. |
||||