Applicability of DNA barcodes for an effective assessment of the diversity of ant communities in the Ecuadorian Andes

Acronym: Andant

Collaborators: Gontran Sonet (JEMU-RBINS), Zoltán T. Nagy (RBINS), Maurice Leponce (RBINS), Justine Jacquemin (ULB), Thibaut Delsinne (RBINS & ULB), Nina Wouters (RBINS & ULB)

Year: 2010

Summary: We propose here to conduct a pilot study to set up and calibrate the use of DNA barcodes to discriminate ant species collected during a large-scale ant inventory at the EDIT ATBI+M(1) site in the Ecuadorian Andes. A usual problem when studying tropical leaf-litter ant assemblages is that the more common genera collected (Solenopsis and Pheidole) are also among the most difficult to identify to species level. A correct determination is particularly critical for biogeographical and ecological studies attempting to define species distributions and the factors that determine them. A molecular approach should improve species determination and bring useful information’s on the isolation or restricted dispersal of some species. It should also provide a powerful tool to match castes from the same species. We propose to work on 3 test assemblages collected at 1000, 2000 and 3000m a.s.l. and to follow a five-step programme: (1) start with one of the genus abundant but difficult to sort morphologically (Solenopsis); (2) for comparison purposes, barcode an invasive species already available in the library of the recent Formicidae barcode of Life project (Wassmannia auropunctata); (3) barcode possibly cryptic species collected at two altitudes; (4) barcode a second genus abundant and difficult to identify and which contains polymorphic species (Pheidole); (5) barcode all species from a single test assemblage (at 1000m) and evaluate what additional information would be needed to infer its phylogenetic structure. The total number of specimens to process is estimated to be around 400. The perspective is to analyse the phylogenetic structure of ant communities in a biodiversity hotspot where we suspect to encounter distinct species assemblages at small geographic scale. This phylogenetic approach would add an evolutionary dimension to the interpretation of the ant community structure. This project complements other on-going projects: the Formicidae barcode of Life, the Arthropod Monitoring Programme of the Smithsonian Center for Tropical Forest Science, a Belspo Action 1, a PhD thesis and an on-line interactive database developed in collaboration with the Belgian Biodiversity Platform.

Output:

  • Peer-reviewed paper: Two new species of Leptanilloides Mann, 1823 (Formicidae: Dorylinae) from the Andes of southern Ecuador. Delsinne T, Sonet G, Donoso D, 2015. European Journal of Taxonomy, 143, 1–35.
  • Peer-reviewed paper: High species turnover of the ant genus Solenopsis (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) along an altitudinal gradient in the Ecuadorian Andes, indicated by a combined DNA sequencing and morphological approach. Delsinne T, Sonet G, Nagy ZT, Wauters N, Jacquemin J & Leponce M, 2012. Invertebrate Systematics, 26, 457–469.
  • Printed abstract: DNA barcoding of fire and thief ants (genus Solenopsis) of the Ecuadorian Andes as a tool for biodiversity research. Sonet, G., Nagy, Z.T., Jacquemin, J., Wauters, N., Delsinne, T., Leponce, M. (2011). In 4th Internation Barcode of Life Conferences, Adelaide, Australia, 28 Nov. – 03 Dec. 2011.
  • Printed abstract: Validation of the DNA barcoding approach to survey ant communities in the Ecuadorian Andes. Sonet, G., Nagy, Z.T., Jacquemin, J., Wauters, N., Delsinne, T., Leponce, M. (2011). In BioSystematics Berlin 2011, 7th International Congress of Systematic and Evolutionary Biology (ICSEB VII), 21 – 27 February 2011, Berlin, Germany), p. 343–344.