Species Distribution Models Reveal Varying Degrees of Refugia From the Invasive Asian Needle Ant for Native Ants Versus Ant‐Plant Seed Dispersal Mutualisms

ABSTRACT The Asian Needle Ant, Brachyponera chinensis (Hymenoptera: Formicidae), has spread throughout a substantial portion of the southeastern United States where it has primarily been restricted to low elevations. We focused on the B. chinensis invasion in Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GSM...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Drew Kanes, Daniel Malagon, Ben Camper, Anna Hewitt, Simon Dunn, Eva Purcell, Sharon Bewick
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-01-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70750
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832583025985060864
author Drew Kanes
Daniel Malagon
Ben Camper
Anna Hewitt
Simon Dunn
Eva Purcell
Sharon Bewick
author_facet Drew Kanes
Daniel Malagon
Ben Camper
Anna Hewitt
Simon Dunn
Eva Purcell
Sharon Bewick
author_sort Drew Kanes
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT The Asian Needle Ant, Brachyponera chinensis (Hymenoptera: Formicidae), has spread throughout a substantial portion of the southeastern United States where it has primarily been restricted to low elevations. We focused on the B. chinensis invasion in Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GSMNP). Records in and near the park represent some of the highest elevation locations of B. chinensis in North America. The goals of this study were to characterize the status of the B. chinensis invasion in GSMNP, to assess the role that disturbance and human visitation play in B. chinensis invasion within GSMNP, to identify the potential of B. chinensis to spread into higher elevations in the park and the southern Appalachians and to determine the impact that this might have on native species, including keystone seed‐dispersers within the Aphaenogaster rudis complex and their myrmecochorous plants. We surveyed GSMNP for B. chinensis at 45 sites, including sites that were burned during the 2016 Gatlinburg fire, sites with high human visitation, and undisturbed sites. We then built species distribution models (SDMs) for B. chinensis and some of the native species that B. chinensis is most likely to impact. This allowed us to assess the potential for high‐elevation refugia within the southern Appalachians. We did not find B. chinensis at any undisturbed sites in GSMNP. We did find B. chinensis at five high‐visitation sites. Field findings were consistent with our SDMs, which suggested that GSMNP's unique precipitation regimes may act as a barrier to invasion. Unfortunately, SDMs indicated moderate suitability for B. chinensis across a sizable proportion of the northern border of the park. This is a region where B. chinensis may have disproportionate impacts on myrmecochorous plant species. Thus, although southern Appalachian precipitation and temperature regimes may provide a refuge from B. chinensis at high elevations, this will not protect all species likely to be impacted by this invasive ant.
format Article
id doaj-art-6ff209c60d664b7e9e378b4cb00d0c46
institution Kabale University
issn 2045-7758
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Ecology and Evolution
spelling doaj-art-6ff209c60d664b7e9e378b4cb00d0c462025-01-29T05:08:41ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582025-01-01151n/an/a10.1002/ece3.70750Species Distribution Models Reveal Varying Degrees of Refugia From the Invasive Asian Needle Ant for Native Ants Versus Ant‐Plant Seed Dispersal MutualismsDrew Kanes0Daniel Malagon1Ben Camper2Anna Hewitt3Simon Dunn4Eva Purcell5Sharon Bewick6Clemson University USAClemson University USAClemson University USAClemson University USAClemson University USAClemson University USAClemson University USAABSTRACT The Asian Needle Ant, Brachyponera chinensis (Hymenoptera: Formicidae), has spread throughout a substantial portion of the southeastern United States where it has primarily been restricted to low elevations. We focused on the B. chinensis invasion in Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GSMNP). Records in and near the park represent some of the highest elevation locations of B. chinensis in North America. The goals of this study were to characterize the status of the B. chinensis invasion in GSMNP, to assess the role that disturbance and human visitation play in B. chinensis invasion within GSMNP, to identify the potential of B. chinensis to spread into higher elevations in the park and the southern Appalachians and to determine the impact that this might have on native species, including keystone seed‐dispersers within the Aphaenogaster rudis complex and their myrmecochorous plants. We surveyed GSMNP for B. chinensis at 45 sites, including sites that were burned during the 2016 Gatlinburg fire, sites with high human visitation, and undisturbed sites. We then built species distribution models (SDMs) for B. chinensis and some of the native species that B. chinensis is most likely to impact. This allowed us to assess the potential for high‐elevation refugia within the southern Appalachians. We did not find B. chinensis at any undisturbed sites in GSMNP. We did find B. chinensis at five high‐visitation sites. Field findings were consistent with our SDMs, which suggested that GSMNP's unique precipitation regimes may act as a barrier to invasion. Unfortunately, SDMs indicated moderate suitability for B. chinensis across a sizable proportion of the northern border of the park. This is a region where B. chinensis may have disproportionate impacts on myrmecochorous plant species. Thus, although southern Appalachian precipitation and temperature regimes may provide a refuge from B. chinensis at high elevations, this will not protect all species likely to be impacted by this invasive ant.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70750AphaenogasterBrachyponera chinensisdisturbanceGreat Smoky Mountains National ParkinvasionMaxEnt
spellingShingle Drew Kanes
Daniel Malagon
Ben Camper
Anna Hewitt
Simon Dunn
Eva Purcell
Sharon Bewick
Species Distribution Models Reveal Varying Degrees of Refugia From the Invasive Asian Needle Ant for Native Ants Versus Ant‐Plant Seed Dispersal Mutualisms
Ecology and Evolution
Aphaenogaster
Brachyponera chinensis
disturbance
Great Smoky Mountains National Park
invasion
MaxEnt
title Species Distribution Models Reveal Varying Degrees of Refugia From the Invasive Asian Needle Ant for Native Ants Versus Ant‐Plant Seed Dispersal Mutualisms
title_full Species Distribution Models Reveal Varying Degrees of Refugia From the Invasive Asian Needle Ant for Native Ants Versus Ant‐Plant Seed Dispersal Mutualisms
title_fullStr Species Distribution Models Reveal Varying Degrees of Refugia From the Invasive Asian Needle Ant for Native Ants Versus Ant‐Plant Seed Dispersal Mutualisms
title_full_unstemmed Species Distribution Models Reveal Varying Degrees of Refugia From the Invasive Asian Needle Ant for Native Ants Versus Ant‐Plant Seed Dispersal Mutualisms
title_short Species Distribution Models Reveal Varying Degrees of Refugia From the Invasive Asian Needle Ant for Native Ants Versus Ant‐Plant Seed Dispersal Mutualisms
title_sort species distribution models reveal varying degrees of refugia from the invasive asian needle ant for native ants versus ant plant seed dispersal mutualisms
topic Aphaenogaster
Brachyponera chinensis
disturbance
Great Smoky Mountains National Park
invasion
MaxEnt
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.70750
work_keys_str_mv AT drewkanes speciesdistributionmodelsrevealvaryingdegreesofrefugiafromtheinvasiveasianneedleantfornativeantsversusantplantseeddispersalmutualisms
AT danielmalagon speciesdistributionmodelsrevealvaryingdegreesofrefugiafromtheinvasiveasianneedleantfornativeantsversusantplantseeddispersalmutualisms
AT bencamper speciesdistributionmodelsrevealvaryingdegreesofrefugiafromtheinvasiveasianneedleantfornativeantsversusantplantseeddispersalmutualisms
AT annahewitt speciesdistributionmodelsrevealvaryingdegreesofrefugiafromtheinvasiveasianneedleantfornativeantsversusantplantseeddispersalmutualisms
AT simondunn speciesdistributionmodelsrevealvaryingdegreesofrefugiafromtheinvasiveasianneedleantfornativeantsversusantplantseeddispersalmutualisms
AT evapurcell speciesdistributionmodelsrevealvaryingdegreesofrefugiafromtheinvasiveasianneedleantfornativeantsversusantplantseeddispersalmutualisms
AT sharonbewick speciesdistributionmodelsrevealvaryingdegreesofrefugiafromtheinvasiveasianneedleantfornativeantsversusantplantseeddispersalmutualisms