What Is on the Menu When You Move Far Away? Realised Diet Niche in a Geographic-Range-Expanding Ant-Eating Spider

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VIEL Nathan Justin Patrice GAJSKI Domagoj PERERA-FERNANDEZ Luis G. PETILLON Julien PEKÁR Stanislav

Rok publikování 2025
Druh Článek v odborném periodiku
Časopis / Zdroj Journal of Biogeography
Fakulta / Pracoviště MU

Přírodovědecká fakulta

Citace
www https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jbi.70036
Doi https://doi.org/10.1111/jbi.70036
Klíčová slova diet shift; ecological niche; Formicinae; gut content; metabarcoding; myrmecophagy; Myrmicinae; range expansion; specialisation; Zodarion rubidum
Popis Aim: Diet represents a fundamental dimension in a species' ecological niche, helping to define where it occurs over space. This is especially apparent in diet specialists, which can be restricted by the limited range of resources they are able to use. Specialists are therefore rarely involved in cases of geographic range expansion, although this may occur as exemplified by the myrmecophagous spider Zodarion rubidum Simon, 1914, which spread from southern France to the rest of Europe in a few decades. In this study, we assessed the trophic niche of this specialist predator over its range. Specifically, we investigated its realised diet niche on a broad spatial scale, using dietary metabarcoding on field-collected individuals. Location: Thirty-seven localities throughout Europe and North America. Taxon: Zodarion rubidum Simon, 1914 (Araneae: Zodariidae). Methods: We first compared diet compositions between populations using an ordination method. We then interpolated the phylogenetic diversity of preyed items over space as a measure of diet niche breadth, as well as the probability of being preyed upon by Z. rubidum in the study area for the most consumed prey, using ordinary kriging. Finally, we tested for a spatial trend in diet breadth using a linear model. Results: We found that Z. rubidum remains strictly myrmecophagous over space; its populations have similar diets; and its diet breadth is consistent across the distribution range. Interestingly, Z. rubidum tends to feed more on Myrmicinae (Tetramorium ants) towards north-eastern Europe, suggesting that it has a broader fundamental diet niche than expected. Main Conclusion: Overall, Z. rubidum does not seem to be restricted by its diet specialisation along its geographic range expansion.
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