Typification of urban habitats, with ant assemblages of Moscow city taken as an example


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Abstract

A typification of Moscow city habitats is undertaken, based on their consideration as mosaic of patches and using such fundamental parameters as habitat origin (soil type), floristic composition, vegetation structure, and area of the biotopes. Altogether, 11 habitat types are distinguished: lawns, agrocenoses, xerophytic and mesophytic meadows, tall weeds, boulevards, small degenerative parks, small oppressed artificial parks, landscape parks, forest parks, and technocenoses. Such a classification is primarily useful for studying ants. The present paper describes the basic structure of ant assemblages in most types of urban biocenoses. The main pool of Moscow’s ant species ranked by their occurrence is as follows: Lasius niger (87%), Myrmica rugulosa (44%), Myrmica rubra (33%), Formica cunicularia (11%), Myrmica ruginodis (10%), etc. Leaf litter removal with a rake was shown to negatively affect the numbers, biomass, and species diversity of ant communities in urban areas with trees. The most stable two-species ant community revealed in Moscow City, termed an “elementary urban community,” consists of L. niger and M. rugulosa, with the former always outnumbering the latter.

About the authors

T. S. Putyatina

Lomonosov Moscow State University

Author for correspondence.
Email: tsergput@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Moscow, 119991

K. S. Perfilieva

Lomonosov Moscow State University

Email: tsergput@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Moscow, 119991

Yu. V. Zakalyukina

Lomonosov Moscow State University

Email: tsergput@gmail.com
Russian Federation, Moscow, 119991

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