Tiny ants are experts when it comes to hitchhiking across the planet

A study into improving biosecurity for unintentionally introduced species has involved recording 146,000 instances of ant stowaways

Finding a way to stop invasive alien species from spreading across the globe has prompted scientists to gain more basic knowledge of where they originated using ants as tourist bait Image: Francois Brassard, Charles Darwin University

They might be tiny, but a recent study has found that ants are no small fry when it comes to hitching a human-assisted ride to different pockets of the globe.

A team of scientists from Australia, Japan and Hong Kong analysed more than 146,000 ‘occurrence records’ of ants to comprehensively map where the pint-sized stowaways had spread outside their native regions.

It was found that at least 520 species of ants had been transported beyond their native geographic regions, and that around 60% had successfully established wild populations or “naturalised” in at least one non-native region.

Dr Mark Wong, a Forrest Fellow from the School of Biological Sciences at The University of Western Australia and lead author of the study, said the minuscule marauders included some of the world’s most damaging invaders.

“Biological invasions by alien species are a complex global problem, and a basic knowledge of where they originate from, where they are going, and their capacity to establish, is key to strengthening biosecurity,” Dr Wong said.

“Our study contributes this information at the global scale for ants, which are extremely important organisms in their native ecosystems, but which can also be among the most damaging when they are unintentionally transported by humans to non-native ecosystems.

During the study it was found 520 species of ants had been successful invaders beyond their native geographic regions and 60% had successfully established wild populationsImage: Francois Brassard, Charles Darwin University

“Crucially, we found that over 300 species have a high capacity to establish non-native populations, and that about two-thirds of those aren’t being intercepted.”

Dr Wong said many of the ants were associated with soil and leaf-litter habitats which suggested opportunities for better detection in things like imported soils used in horticulture, agriculture and construction.

The study also documented the exchange of ant species between major zoogeographic realms of the world, with maps revealing that alien ant species had been recorded in almost all but the coldest parts of the Earth’s terrestrial surface.

“The numbers of naturalised species were highest in the southern United States as well as numerous oceanic islands including Hawaii, the Mascarene Islands and the Lesser Antilles,” Dr Wong said.

Dr Wong said it is hoped that identifying hotspot regions for the unintentional export or import of ant species would contribute to understanding the spread patterns and improving biosecurity for other unintentionally introduced species, such as other insects and fungi.