As ecosystem engineers, ants can mediate soil processes and functions by producing biogenic structures. In their mounds, ants not only directly produce CO2 by respiration, but may also indirectly impact soil greenhouse gas emissions by affecting substrate availability and soil physicochemical characteristics. Recent studies focused on overall gas production from ant mounds. However, little is known about mound material respiration and N2O emissions in ant mounds in wetlands. We measured CO2 and N2O emissions from mound soils of three different ant species (Lasius niger Linnaeus, Lasius flavus Fabricius, and Formica candida Smith) and natural marsh soils in a laboratory incubation experiment. On the whole, average soil CO2 and N2O emission r...
Red wood ants build their nests as above-ground mounds by collecting organic materials from the fore...
Organic mounds of the red wood ants (Formica rufa group; RWA) have been shown to be hot spots of c...
Leaf‐cutter ants are dominant herbivores that disturb the soil and create biogeochemical hot spots. ...
Ants are important components of most soil invertebrate communities, and can affect the flow of ener...
Leaf-cutter ants are one of the most conspicuous inhabitants of New World forests and plantations. T...
Many ant species construct subterranean nests. The presence of their nests may explain soil respirat...
Little information is available regarding red wood ant (RWA; Formica rufa group) impacts on soil car...
Soil biota activity in arid lands is often limited by the availability of water and organic matter. ...
Leaf-cutting ants of the genus Atta are widely distributed throughout the American tropics and subtr...
Ants can create abundant and continuous soil macropores by burrowing their nests. The hydrological p...
Ants are important soil engineers, affecting the structure and function of ecosystems. To address th...
Recent studies suggest that wood ants (Formica rufa group) mounds are point sources of carbon dioxid...
Abstract Claustral foundation of nests by Atta sexdens Forel (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) involves grea...
Soil dwelling ants are important soil engineers that have a large impact on the soil ecosystem. This...
Although it is known that small changes in boreal soil carbon (C) fluxes may affect the global soil ...
Red wood ants build their nests as above-ground mounds by collecting organic materials from the fore...
Organic mounds of the red wood ants (Formica rufa group; RWA) have been shown to be hot spots of c...
Leaf‐cutter ants are dominant herbivores that disturb the soil and create biogeochemical hot spots. ...
Ants are important components of most soil invertebrate communities, and can affect the flow of ener...
Leaf-cutter ants are one of the most conspicuous inhabitants of New World forests and plantations. T...
Many ant species construct subterranean nests. The presence of their nests may explain soil respirat...
Little information is available regarding red wood ant (RWA; Formica rufa group) impacts on soil car...
Soil biota activity in arid lands is often limited by the availability of water and organic matter. ...
Leaf-cutting ants of the genus Atta are widely distributed throughout the American tropics and subtr...
Ants can create abundant and continuous soil macropores by burrowing their nests. The hydrological p...
Ants are important soil engineers, affecting the structure and function of ecosystems. To address th...
Recent studies suggest that wood ants (Formica rufa group) mounds are point sources of carbon dioxid...
Abstract Claustral foundation of nests by Atta sexdens Forel (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) involves grea...
Soil dwelling ants are important soil engineers that have a large impact on the soil ecosystem. This...
Although it is known that small changes in boreal soil carbon (C) fluxes may affect the global soil ...
Red wood ants build their nests as above-ground mounds by collecting organic materials from the fore...
Organic mounds of the red wood ants (Formica rufa group; RWA) have been shown to be hot spots of c...
Leaf‐cutter ants are dominant herbivores that disturb the soil and create biogeochemical hot spots. ...