ANTS IN BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION: A PROPOSED IUCN ANT
SPECIALIST GROUP AND ITS POSSIBLE FUNCTIONS
John Fellowes, Carsten Bruehl and
The IUCN (World Conservation Union)
· strengthening and facilitating ant taxonomy and identification as a basis for conservation of species and ecosystems;
· elucidating geographical distributions of ants, highlighting centres of radiation and refugia;
· elucidating environmental influences (natural and anthropogenic) on ant community composition;
· improving assessment of ecosystem distinctiveness, integrity, variability and vulnerability based on the ant community;
· highlighting the main threats to ant biodiversity, and the regions, sites, ecosystems and taxa at greatest risk (Red Listing);
· contributing to understanding rates of global biodiversity loss (e.g. through the Sampled Red List Index);
· unravelling the roles and significance (ecological and economic) of ants in the health, maintenance and recovery of natural and managed ecosystems;
· understanding the impacts (ecological and economic) and threats from non-native ant species to biodiversity;
· promoting understanding of the ecological, economic and cultural importance of ants, and of declining ant diversity;
· improving the ability to manipulate the ant community for enhanced productivity and resilience of managed ecosystems;
· encouraging sound scientific investigation on Asian ants; and
· advocacy for scientifically-sound policy related to ants.
The ASG can draw on and develop ideas formulated for the proposed
ANeT Action Plan, as well as other leading concepts and initiatives from global
myrmecology. It can also feed into major ecosystem conservation initiatives in