Lecture 17- Australian invertebrates' diversity II Flashcards

1
Q

What is the classification of Ants?

A

P: Arthropoda C: Insecta

O: Hymenoptera (ants, wasps & bees) F: Formicidae (ants)

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2
Q

How would you identify insects?

A
  • exoskeleton
  • legs not branched
  • 1 pair of antennae
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3
Q

What are ants diverse in and what things make up diversity?

A
  • Morphological * Ecology / life-history * Number of species / taxa
  • -also many ants look like ants!
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4
Q

What is the ant diversity of ants in Australia?

A

Subfamilies: -16World -10 Australia
Genera: 300World 103Australia,
Sp. 15,000World* 1275*Australia
-most are endemic in Australia and very many here!

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5
Q

Where do ants live?

A
  • habitat diversity
    1. arid zone: do well as they are small (don’t need much food) are ectothermic, can store food,seed eating is common in ants in Australia, not so in other places
    2. alpine: not as many, not active during very cold periods, have galleries that are deep down where they retreat to, S Aus
    3. temperate woodland: many many species,Ants forage on the ground, but many species also forage in trees & some nest in trees
    4. Wet dry tropics: lots of ants there
  • all the ants are similar morphologically but are extremely ecologically diverse, the habitat diversity is along the east coast and lot in tropics
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6
Q

What is ants’ sociality like?

A
  • colonial and cooperative, an individual cannot survive outside the colony
  • have castes: queen, males are winged, workers are all sterile females (includes all soldiers)
  • some species have repletes
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7
Q

What are casts like in ants?

A

• Queen: 1/ nest, she will raise the first badge of eggs, then workers take over • Workers: very large numbers (100s - 10s of 1000s) • Males: never functional part of colony, mate
and die
-Female larvae:
• develop into sterile workers (driven by chemical signals from the queen)
• if queen absent, or if nest very large, some larvae develop into queens
-Castes: avoid interpreting in anthropomorphic context (ants don’t think like us!)
-soldiers are female, large and have big jaws

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8
Q

What is communication and cooperation like in ants?

A
  • can cooperate in complex tasks
  • can carry large objects together, cooperation
  • antennating= communicating ants
  • the chemical signal is in the cuticle of the exoskeleton (that is how they recognise one another)
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9
Q

What are ant nets like?

A
  • central to colony function
  • often underground, holes, digging is energy intensive, many nests last for decades and digging not a problem since have many workers
  • they are animals that can modify their environment, built the nests to modify temperature and humidity
  • many nest have deep galleries
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10
Q

What are the ant plants?

A
  • Ants live in chambers Inside the plant
  • mutualism
  • often on big emerging rainforest plants
  • complex of galleries built by the plant
  • plant gets protected and ants have a house that is not going to be damaged by heavy rains
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11
Q

What are the meat ants?

A
  • 10 000s of individuals
  • characteristic nests, have fine pebbles around the nest entry
  • get any rubble etc out of the surrounding area
  • big colonies, several hundred meters across
  • ability to recognise each other is important
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12
Q

What are the characteristics of Green tree ants?

A
  • live in trees in the tropics
  • stitch leaves together with silk
  • hold it together with their legs
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13
Q

What is the diet of ants like?

A
  • predators - scavengers - seeds (quite common in Australia, not very common in other parts of the world, also a mutualistic relationship with acacia)
  • often feed on the liquid of victims, some eat nectar (fill up repletes= for bad times)
  • can catch live prey or can just find stuff that is dead
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14
Q

What is the mutualistic relationship of ants and acacias?

A

Mutualistic relationships with plants - some ant species:

  • feed on oil rich elaiosomes from Acacia - have a role in seed dispersal
  • protect the seed, so can germinate away from parent plant in a fertile ground
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15
Q

What is the mutualism of Lycaenid butterfly and ants?

A
  • butterfly use the ants as a cue for oviposition
  • because often the ants will be on acacia foliage and that is rich in nitrogen (can fix nitrogen)
  • butterfly lay their eggs there and the ants protect the larvae and the catepillars secrete nitrogen rich amino acids
  • if ants are there the eggs will be lain there (65%)
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16
Q

What is the moth larvae parasitism on ants?

A
  • lay eggs and larvae hatch in green ant nests
  • the larvae mimic the ants mimically
  • the larvae feed on the ants’ eggs
  • once they metamorphose they lose the chemical protection and have to fly away quickly
17
Q

What is termite diversity like in Australia?

A
  • families: world-7, Australia- 5

- speceis: world-2300, Australia-348 (15%)

18
Q

What is the classification of termites ?

A

Termites:
P: Arthropoda
C: Insecta
O: Isoptera (termites)

19
Q

What are the casts like in termites?

A
  • have casts, specialised forms for different role sin the colony
  • the workers are sterile female and males
  • have winged males and queen
  • soldiers are modified workers= large mandibles, larger and sterile
20
Q

Where do termites live?

A
  • termite mounds, many different shapes and places in which they can be
  • termite nests may be in trees
  • very resistant, built with saliva
  • termites are very widespread
21
Q

What is the magnetic termite mound (northern australia)?

A
  • nth-sth orientation helps maintain even internal temp
  • when sun overhead, not much surface exposed
  • humidity high, up to 95%
22
Q

Where do most termites nest?

A
  • most species nest in timber or underground

- relatively cryptic, hard to see if not the obvious mound above ground

23
Q

Why is the nest important for termites?

A

-Termite colonies function around their nest (can’t survive alone – similar to ants).
Termites actively maintain temp & humidity in nest
Colony size varies with species - from a few 100 to several million individuals!!

24
Q

What is the termite diet like?

A
  • live & dead timber, grass etc. -Food: poor quality & may have very low water content
  • Plant material contains cellulose (rich in sugars) but animals lack cellulases to digest this so utilize a symbiotic protists Trichonympha
  • can eat dry grass
25
Q

What is Trichonympha?

A
  • a symbiotic protist, lives in the gut of termites, and has cellulases and can digest cellulose.
  • Tiny chips of wood engulfed by symbiotic protists that have cellulases that digest cellulose (producing glucose)
26
Q

Termites summary:

A
  • Very small – total energy needs low
  • Invertebrates = ectotherms = lower energy requirements than vertebrates
  • Nest maintained at even temp & high humidity, lowers water stress, assists in feeding on food with low water content
  • Store food assists in avoiding food shortages e.g. during drought
    Able to exploit nutrient poor & drought prone envit.s