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Ant‐ and termite‐eating in Australian mammals and lizards: a comparison
Author(s) -
ABENSPERGTRAUN MAX,
STEVEN DION
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
australian journal of ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1442-9993
pISSN - 0307-692X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1442-9993.1997.tb00637.x
Subject(s) - arid , biology , insectivore , ecology , abundance (ecology) , predation , ant , lizard , sauria
Relative abundance is one factor that influences selection of prey by insectivorous mammals and lizards. Ants and termites are extremely abundant over most of inland Australia. Their patterns of abundance are also broadly similar across climatic gradients, being most and least abundant in seasonally arid (tropic and sub‐tropic) and temperate mesic regions, respectively. All else being equal (e. g. mechanisms of prey defence, palat‐ability, availability), animals that eat many termites should also eat many (adult) ants. The present study asks three questions: (i) What is the diversity of specialized ant‐eaters (>50% volume)?; (ii) Does specialization vary with climate?; and (iii) Are ants and termites eaten in broadly similar proportions (using an earlier study on termites). Of the mammals, only the echidna ( Tachyglossus aculeatus ) in mesic regions, and probably the marsupial mole ( Notoryctes typhlops ) in the arid zone and the striped possum ( Dactylopsila trivirgata ) in mesic regions are ant‐specialized. Ant‐specialization in mammals shows no pattern with regard to climate. Of the lizards, only four agamid lizards are ant‐specialized: Moloch horridus (arid, semi‐arid), Ctenophorus fordi (arid, semi‐arid), Ctenophorus isolepis (arid) and Ctenophorus maculatus (arid). Specialization on ants by lizards is greatest in the arid zone (4 spp.); no lizard species were found to be ant‐specialists in mesic regions. In the arid and semi‐arid zone, two mammals each specialize on termites and one on ants; in mesic regions, two mammals specialize on ants and one on termites. Specialized insectivorous mammals thus demonstrate no marked preference for either termites or ants. Lizards, in contrast, are markedly termite‐specialized (4 ant‐specialist spp., 16 termite‐specialist spp.), and specialization is greatest in the arid zone (16 spp.). Greater specialization on termites than on (adult) ants in lizards is explained with reference to differences in prey defence and palatability between ants and termites. Consumption of ant brood (eggs, larvae, pupae) appears to be associated with a fossorial foraging mode (the marsupial mole N. typhlops ; spp. of Aprasia lizards; spp. of blindsnakes Ramphotyphlops ).