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LeafCutter Ants at Hornsby Bend

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... about planting trees and forest restoration efforts at Hornsby ... Photo from TAMU website: http://www-viz.tamu.edu/faculty/lurleen/main/attamain.htm ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: LeafCutter Ants at Hornsby Bend


1
Leaf-Cutter Ants at Hornsby Bend
  • Locations and Interactions

Team members Bryan Lai Andrew Horton
Michael Murphy Ryan Thomas Peg Wallace
2
Project Goals
  • Find and map Leaf-cutter Ant colonies
  • Map extent of colonies plot in relation to major
    trees and other landmarks
  • Observe interactions between ants the environment
  • Evaluate impacts of past land-use on
    presence/absence of ants
  • Map general distributions and monitor
    interactions of other ant species and insects
    found during this study, specifically harvester
    ants, carpenter ants, fire ants, and digger bees.

3
Accomplishments
  • Created a map detailing Leaf-Cutter Ant colony
    locations and their relation to other species of
    ants
  • Established a possible correlation between nest
    sites and past
    land use
  • Photographic documentation
    of ant activity
  • Observed interactions with
    other ant species
  • Production of a web site
  • Class presentation

4
Overview of Leaf-cutter species
  • Fungus growers
  • Prefer disturbed/cleared areas
  • Important ecologically
  • Leafcutters forage on many kinds of plants
  • Range may depend on
  • -rainfall patterns
  • -vegetation
  • -temperature

5
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6
Map of colony in Tract C
7
Behavioral Observations
  • Mostly a mystery!
  • No clear cut connection to light levels
  • Preferred moderate temperatures
  • Some days we saw activity, most days we didnt

8
Species Interactions
  • No real problem with fire ants
  • Found all three species in close proximity to
    each other
  • No clear competition between different species
    located close to each other

Fire Ant
Harvester Ants
Leaf-cutter ant
9
Food Foraging
  • Plant species gathered include wild geraniums,
    elm, hackberry, and dewberry
  • Pile of leaves at the base
  • of the elm tree a mystery

10
Interactions with Soil
  • Water infiltration experiment

11
Land Use
  • Leaf-cutters seem to prefer cleared/disturbed
    areas and edges

12
Other Ant Species
  • Fire, Pyramid, Carpenter, and Harvester ants

Harvester ants
Carpenter ants
Pyramid ants
Fire ants
13
Problems Encountered
  • Scheduling Our scheduled field work has not
    necessarily coincided with the ants peak
    activity
  • Weather Can and has occasionally been wholly
    uncooperative, resulting in minimal ant activity
  • Other insects
  • Poison ivy

14
Surprises!
15
Digger bees
  • Were an accidental find
  • Observed lots of interesting interactions
    including mating, males patrolling, bees
    gathering pollen, flies emerging from bee holes

16
Digger bees
  • There are parasitic and non-parasitic species.
  • They burrow in the ground
  • The bees are solitary but nest in colonies
  • They line their burrows with a waxy substance

17
Course Strands - Ecological Interactions
  • ants are important in an ecosystem
  • they stimulate plant growth and add organic
    matter to the topsoil

18
Course Strands - Communication and Collaboration
19
Course Strands - Sustainability
  • The ants sustain themselves by foraging, cleaning
    out the nest, etc.
  • By working the soil, they contribute to the
    sustainability of the whole system
  • They prefer land with some human disturbance
  • Clearing the fields for hay and the existence of
    the road dont seem to pose a problem for ant
    sustainability. However, the gravel mines might
    hinder the ants from building nests

20
Humans and sustainability
  • With Kevin, we learned about planting trees and
    forest restoration efforts at Hornsby
  • Hornsby Bend is a reservoir of biodiversity
  • The treatment of biosolids at Hornsby sustains
    bird populations and allows for the reuse of
    human waste as dillo dirt

21
What else would we do?
  • More time observing
  • Observe during different seasons throughout the
    year - we were only there during the Spring
  • Dig up the nest chamber to observe the fungus

Photo from TAMU website http//www-viz.tamu.edu/f
aculty/lurleen/main/attamain.htm
22
Leaf-Cutter Ants at Hornsby Bend
  • A Field Study

23
This project was planned as a field experience
for the undergrads. The ants were just something
to focus on the real objective was to learn what
field work is really like.
24
What did we learn?
  • Since this was an unscripted project, we
    learned to
  • Observe
  • Pay attention to small details
  • Wait for the Ah-Hah!! moments, and to recognize
    them when they came!

25
We learned some new skills and ways to observe
26
We learned by experimenting
27
We did some measuring, and made some maps
28
We made lots of up close and personal
observations
29
And probably most importantly, we learned by just
BEING THERE!!!
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