Termite Ecology in the First Two Decades of the 21st Century: A Review of Reviews

Insects
David E Bignell

Abstract

Termite ecology came of age in 1978 with the seminal review of Wood and Sands which by considering the quantitative contributions made by termites to the carbon cycle at the landscape level concluded that they were major players in tropical ecosystems. Subsequent field work in the succeeding two decades was summarised in 2000 by Bignell and Eggleton, the most recent review which attempted to cover the entire topic in detail, which included 188 listed references and has been extensively cited for almost 20 years. Subsequent summaries more narrowly defined or in some cases more superficial are listed in the bibliography. In this overview, the main and subsidiary headings in Bignell and Eggleton are revisited and reclassified in the light of 186 selected articles added to the relevant literature since 2000, and some earlier work. While the literature on termite ecology remains buoyant, it has declined relative to publications on other aspects of termite biology. Overall, the thesis that termites have a major impact on, and are major indicators of soil health and landscape integrity in the tropics and sub-tropics is maintained, but the drivers of local diversity, abundance and biomass remain complex, with many biographical, edaphic...Continue Reading

References

Mar 31, 2011·Nature Communications·Theodore A EvansNathan Lo
Oct 2, 2012·Annual Review of Entomology·Theodore A EvansJ Kenneth Grace
Sep 17, 2013·Applied and Environmental Microbiology·Adrian HoEric Van Ranst
Nov 27, 2014·Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society·Michael D Ulyshen
Feb 9, 2016·Scientific Reports·Sebastian OberstTheodore A Evans
Jan 12, 2019·Science·L A AshtonP Eggleton

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Citations

Aug 22, 2020·Current Opinion in Insect Science·Michael E Scharf

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