Harvester ant Messor barbarus. Credit: Renaud Jaunatre/IMBE/CNRS

In nature, certain species are able to regulate the cycling of soil nutrients and vegetation diversity and dynamics.

A team of ecologists and agronomists led by Thierry Dutoit, a CNRS researcher at the Mediterranean Institute of Biodiversity and Marine and Continental Ecology (CNRS/Avignon Université/IRD/Aix-Marseille Université) studied the impact of the Messor barbarus harvester ant on Mediterranean dry grasslands on the plain of La Crau.

The study shows that these invertebrates accelerated the resilience of plant communities in these degraded grasslands by facilitating their recovery. Over a period of 5 to 10 years, these ants have improved soil fertility; ensured the transport, redistribution and storage of seeds, and also significantly increased the plant biomass next to their nests.

This work, published online in the journal Biological Conservation (15 April 2020), demonstrates the potential key role of ants as ecological engineers for the conservation and restoration of Mediterranean dry grasslands in the medium term.

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More information: Tania De Almeida et al, Harvester ants as ecological engineers for Mediterranean grassland restoration: Impacts on soil and vegetation, Biological Conservation (2020). Journal information: Biological Conservation Tania De Almeida et al, Harvester ants as ecological engineers for Mediterranean grassland restoration: Impacts on soil and vegetation,(2020). DOI: 10.1016/j.biocon.2020.108547