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1.
Personal relationships are the cornerstone of vertebrate societies, but insect societies are either too large for individual recognition, or their members were assumed to lack the necessary cognitive abilities . This paradigm has been challenged by the recent discovery that paper wasps recognize each other's unique facial color patterns . Individual recognition is advantageous when dominance hierarchies control the partitioning of work and reproduction . Here, we show that unrelated founding queens of the ant Pachycondyla villosa use chemical cues to recognize each other individually. Aggression was significantly lower in pairs of queens that had previously interacted than in pairs with similar social history but no experience with one another. Moreover, subordinates discriminated familiar and unfamiliar dominants in choice experiments in which physical contact, but not odor perception, was prevented and in tests with anaesthetized queens. The cuticular chemical profiles of queens were neither associated with dominance nor fertility and, therefore, do not represent status badges , and nestmate queens did not share a common odor. Personal recognition facilitates the maintenance of stable dominance hierarchies in these small societies. This suggests that the ability to discriminate between individual traits is selected for when it incurs net benefits for the resolution of conflict.  相似文献   

2.
Long-term memory of individual identity in ant queens   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Remembering individual identities is part of our own everyday social life. Surprisingly, this ability has recently been shown in two social insects. While paper wasps recognize each other individually through their facial markings, the ant, Pachycondyla villosa, uses chemical cues. In both species, individual recognition is adaptive since it facilitates the maintenance of stable dominance hierarchies among individuals, and thus reduces the cost of conflict within these small societies. Here, we investigated individual recognition in Pachycondyla ants by quantifying the level of aggression between pairs of familiar or unfamiliar queens over time. We show that unrelated founding queens of P. villosa and Pachycondyla inversa store information on the individual identity of other queens and can retrieve it from memory after 24h of separation. Thus, we have documented for the first time that long-term memory of individual identity is present and functional in ants. This novel finding represents an advance in our understanding of the mechanism determining the evolution of cooperation among unrelated individuals.  相似文献   

3.
Growing empirical evidence indicates that invertebrates become more resistant to a pathogen following initial exposure to a nonlethal dose; yet the generality, mechanisms, and adaptive value of such immune priming are still under debate. Because life‐history theory predicts that immune priming and large investment in immunity should be more frequent in long‐lived species, we here tested for immune priming and pathogen resistance in ant queens, which have extraordinarily long life span. We exposed virgin and mated queens of Lasius niger and Formica selysi to a low dose of the entomopathogenic fungus Beauveria bassiana, before challenging them with a high dose of the same pathogen. We found evidence for immune priming in naturally mated queens of L. niger. In contrast, we found no sign of priming in virgin queens of L. niger, nor in virgin or experimentally mated queens of F. selysi, which indicates that immune priming in ant queens varies according to mating status and mating conditions or species. In both ant species, mated queens showed higher pathogen resistance than virgin queens, which suggests that mating triggers an up‐regulation of the immune system. Overall, mated ant queens combine high reproductive output, very long life span, and elevated investment in immune defense. Hence, ant queens are able to invest heavily in both reproduction and maintenance, which can be explained by the fact that mature queens will be protected and nourished by their worker offspring.  相似文献   

4.
Recognition of group‐members is a key feature of sociality. Ants use chemical communication to discriminate nestmates from intruders, enhancing kin cooperation and preventing parasitism. The recognition code is embedded in their cuticular chemical profile, which typically varies between colonies. We predicted that ants might be capable of accurate recognition in unusual situations when few individuals interact repeatedly, as new colonies started by two to three queens. Individual recognition would be favoured by selection when queens establish dominance hierarchies, because repeated fights for dominance are costly; but it would not evolve in absence of hierarchies. We previously showed that Pachycondyla co‐founding queens, which form dominance hierarchies, have accurate individual recognition based on chemical cues. Here, we used the ant Lasius niger to test the null hypothesis that individual recognition does not occur when co‐founding queens do not establish dominance hierarchies. Indeed, L. niger queens show a similar level of aggression towards both co‐foundresses and intruders, indicating that they are unable of individual recognition, contrary to Pachycondyla. Additionally, the variation in chemical profiles of Lasius and Pachycondyla queens is comparable, thus informational constraints are unlikely to apply. We conclude that selection pressure from the social context is of crucial significance for the sophistication of recognition systems.  相似文献   

5.
Summary We examined nest site selection by foundresses of the polygyne form ofSolenopsis invicta. In the laboratory, foundresses were allowed to nest in control soil vs. soil inoculated with refuse from a colony ofPheidole dentata, a natural enemy. In a second experiment foundresses chose between control andS. invicta soil. More foundresses (100%) avoided the soil of a natural enemy than the soil of a conspecific colony (79%) that may accept them into the nest. Foundresses from this polygyne ant appear to avoid other colonies in general, but avoid heterospecific colonies more.  相似文献   

6.
Dear Editor,The establishment of a new colony is a critical phase in the life of an insect society.Young ant queens may avoid the high risks of solitary founding by starting new colonies together with other young queens(pleometrosis).Foundress associations may produce first workers faster and have a higher survival rate than solitary foundresses(Bernasconi&Strassmann,1999).Because cofoundresses are typically not related pleometrosis is rarely associated with a clear division of labor(Jeanson&Fewell,2008).  相似文献   

7.
Reproductive sharing among cobreeders, in which reproductiveshares may vary from equal contribution (low reproductive skew)to reproductive dominance by one individual (high reproductiveskew), is a fundamental feature of animal societies. Recenttheoretical work, the reproductive skew models, has focusedon factors affecting the degree to which reproduction is skewedwithin a society. We used the parameters provided by skew modelsas a guideline to study determinants of reproductive sharingin polygyne ants. As a model system we used two-queen laboratorycolonies of the ant Formica fusca in which the reproductiveshares of each queen was assessed from offspring by using allozymesand DNA microsatellites. We tested how the different variablesincluded in reproductive skew models (queen-queen relatedness,potential fighting ability, productivity, and worker relatednessreflected by queen number in the colony of origin) affect reproductivesharing among queens. The results showed that the relatednessamong queens explained 26% of the variation in reproductiveskew. The size difference between queens (reflecting potentialfighting ability), colony productivity, and worker relatednessdid not have an effect on reproductive partitioning among cobreeders.To our knowledge, this is the first study to test for the effectsof various determinants of skew in an experimental setting.  相似文献   

8.
Mating can affect female immunity in multiple ways. On the one hand, the immune system may be activated by pathogens transmitted during mating, sperm and seminal proteins, or wounds inflicted by males. On the other hand, immune defences may also be down‐regulated to reallocate resources to reproduction. Ants are interesting models to study post‐mating immune regulation because queens mate early in life, store sperm for many years, and use it until their death many years later, while males typically die after mating. This long‐term commitment between queens and their mates limits the opportunity for sexual conflict but raises the new constraint of long‐term sperm survival. In this study, we examine experimentally the effect of mating on immunity in wood ant queens. Specifically, we compared the phenoloxidase and antibacterial activities of mated and virgin Formica paralugubris queens. Queens had reduced levels of active phenoloxidase after mating, but elevated antibacterial activity 7 days after mating. These results indicate that the process of mating, dealation and ovary activation triggers dynamic patterns of immune regulation in ant queens that probably reflect functional responses to mating and pathogen exposure that are independent of sexual conflict.  相似文献   

9.
Queens of eusocial Hymenoptera are inseminated only during a brief period before they start to lay eggs. This has probably been kin-selected because repeated insemination of old queens would normally be against the inclusive fitness interest of their daughter workers. Army ants have been considered to be the only possible exception to this rule due to their idiosyncratic life-history. We studied two distantly related species of army ants, the African Dorylus (Anomma) molestus and the Neotropical Eciton burchellii and present data from microsatellite genotyping, behavioural observations and sperm counts.We also describe the copulation behaviour of African army ants for the first time. Our results strongly suggest that, contradictory to earlier contentions, army ant queens do not mate repeatedly throughout their life and thus do not constitute an exception among the eusocial Hymenoptera in this respect. Sperm counts for males and queens of both species show that army ant queens have to mate with several males to become fully inseminated. However, sperm limitation by queens is unlikely to have been the prime reason for the evolution of high queen-mating frequencies in this group. Received 5 July 2006; revised 26 September 2006; accepted 11 October 2006.  相似文献   

10.
Divergent reproductive interests of males and females often cause sexual conflict . Males of many species manipulate females by transferring seminal fluids that boost female short-term fecundity while decreasing their life expectancy and future reproductivity . The life history of ants, however, is expected to reduce sexual conflict; whereas most insect females show repeated phases of mating and reproduction, ant queens mate only during a short period early in life and undergo a lifelong commitment to their mates by storing sperm . Furthermore, sexual offspring can only be reared after a sterile worker force has been built up . Therefore, the males should also profit from a long female lifespan. In the ant Cardiocondyla obscurior, mating indeed has a positive effect on the lifetime reproductive success of queens. Queens that mated to either one fertile or one sterilized male lived considerably longer and started laying eggs earlier than virgin queens. Only queens that received viable sperm from fertile males showed increased fecundity. The lack of a trade-off between fecundity and longevity is unexpected, given evolutionary theories of aging . Our data instead reveal the existence of sexual cooperation in ants.  相似文献   

11.
Depletion of reserves in ant queens during claustral colony founding   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Summary Gynes in the claustrally-founding speciesCrematogaster opuntiae andCamponotus festinatus accumulate large amounts of protein and lipid between the time of eclosion and mating. During colony founding, protein is depleted from both the thorax and abdomen and lipid from the abdomen. The abdomen, and specifically its accumulated storage protein, provides an amino acid store equivalent to or larger than that of flight muscle. The importance of this second major protein reserve in the evolution of claustral colony founding should be considered.  相似文献   

12.
《Animal behaviour》1986,34(4):1135-1145
Bond formation between young workers and queens is described for three species of Myrmica. This caste bond inhibits aggression and develops cooperation. Workers have a bias towards queens of their own species and do not discriminate between a queen of their own colony and a novel conspecific one. They are able to develop bonds with queens of other species of the genus provided they meet them first and well before their state of queenless aggressiveness sets in. A bispecific group, in situation contrived to enable them to meet gradually, will fight a normal group. They will then develop their bond to include the conspecific queen without becoming hostile to the earlier substitute. Evidently a queen of another species is able to provide an outline set of stimuli that is later built up by the conspecific queen, a characteristic of the imprinting development process. Allospecific queens can establish new microsocieties in a way reminiscent of temporary social parasites. The fact that allospecifically bonded workers will fight their one-time litter-mates that have been normally bonded suggests that the two groups have acquired different smells from their specifically distinct queens.  相似文献   

13.
Holzer B  Chapuisat M  Keller L 《Oecologia》2008,157(4):717-723
Understanding social evolution requires us to understand the processes regulating the number of breeders within social groups and how they partition reproduction. Queens in polygynous (multiple queens per colony) ants often seek adoption in established colonies instead of founding a new colony independently. This mode of dispersal leads to potential conflicts, as kin selection theory predicts that resident workers should favour nestmate queens over foreign queens. Here we compared the survival of foreign and resident queens as well as their relative reproductive share. We used the ant Formica exsecta to construct colonies consisting of one queen with workers related to this resident queen and introduced a foreign queen. We found that the survival of foreign queens did not differ from that of resident queens over a period of 136 days. However, the genetic analyses revealed that resident queens produced a 1.5-fold higher number of offspring than introduced queens, and had an equal or higher share in 80% of the colonies. These data indicate that some discrimination can occur against dispersing individuals and that dispersal can thus have costs in terms of direct reproduction for dispersing queens.  相似文献   

14.
In vertebrates and invertebrates, oxytocin/vasopressin-like peptides modulate a variety of behaviors. The recent discovery of the gene and receptor sequences of inotocin, the insect ortholog of oxytocin/vasopressin, opens new opportunities for understanding the role of this peptide family in regulating behaviors in the most populated class of living animals. Ants live in highly organized colonies. Once a year, they produce future queens that soon leave the nest to mate and found new colonies. During the first months of their lives, ant queens display a sequence of behaviors ranging from copulation and social interactions to violent fighting. In order to investigate the potential roles of inotocin in shaping queen behavior, we measured gene expression of the inotocin receptor in the heads of Lasius niger ant queens at different points in time. The highest levels of expression occurred early in queen life when they experience crowded conditions in their mother nests and soon thereafter set out to mate. Inotocin could thus be involved in regulating social and reproductive behaviors as reported in other animals. While oxytocin and vasopressin are also involved in aggression in mammals, we found no direct link between these behaviors and inotocin receptor expression in L. niger. Our study provides a first glimpse into the roles the inotocin receptor might play in regulating important processes in ant physiology and behavior. Further studies are needed to understand the molecular function of this complex signaling system in more detail.  相似文献   

15.
One hundred and fifty one colonies of the ant L. acervorum comprising 815 queens were sampled in dry pine forest at nine sites in SE Sweden. 63% of the colonies contained more than one queen and of these 79% had more than one egg-laying (functional) queen, i.e. were polygynous. By using the electrophoretic variation at the PGI locus a high overall relatedness (0.4) among queens from the same colony was found indicating that young queens are adopted by their mother nest. No spatial microdifferentiation in allele frequencies could be detected and it thus seems that despite restricted movements of queens there is a free gene flow in the populations.  相似文献   

16.
In social Hymenoptera, queens receive a given amount of sperm during a single or multiple inseminations once and for all. The amount of sperm stored at mating determines the maximum number of fertilized eggs queens can produce for the rest of their reproductive life. We propose flow cytometry (FCM) as a method to estimate the concentration of sperm cells, as well as their ploidy level, in queens’ spermathecae. Our data, obtained from 5 ant species, show that FCM is precise, repeatable, easy to conduct and rapid. Estimates of variation of spermathecal content always remain below 10%, and samples can be analysed in less than 5 minutes. Flow cytometry appears as an excellent method for comparative analyses of sperm number within and between ant species. Received 22 February 2008 ; revised 7 April 2008 ; accepted 9 April 2008.  相似文献   

17.
ABSTRACT. The abilities of various categories of queens of the fire ant, Solenopsis invicta Buren, to inhibit de-alation by virgin queens are compared by means of a standardized bioassay that detects the presence of an inhibitory pheromone. Highly fecund (high weight) queens of monogynous colonies and virgin replacement queens in queenless colonies have a significantly greater inhibitory capability than queens of lower fecundity (lower weight). In polygynous colonies, inhibitory effectiveness is also positively related to the fertility of individual queens, although no pheromone can be detected in queens that lay few eggs. Alate virgin queens that have overwintered in the parental nest, and sexually mature spring-reared virgin queens, either do not produce the pheromone, or produce too little to be detected. These results are discussed in relation to the degree of ovarian development of different queen categories and in relation to the social status of these queens.  相似文献   

18.
Mutualistic associations among nonkin can form when animalsin groups have a greater chance of overcoming challenges presentedby the environment than do solitary animals. Colony foundingby small groups of unrelated queens, a habit documented in severalspecies of ants, is often interpreted as a mutualistic interactionselected by intense competition among incipient colonies. However,many new colonies in these species are founded in areas wheretheir chief enemies are mature ant colonies, rather than othernewly founded colonies. In this study, we tested whether groupnest-founding in the fire ant Solenopsis invicta improved theability of queens to survive attacks by mature colonies. Inthe laboratory, queens in groups of three were more likely thansolitary queens to survive attacks by workers of the nativefire ant Solenopsis geminata. When newly mated queens were establishedexperimentally in the field, workers from mature S. invictacolonies caused the majority of queen deaths. Queens in groupsof two, but not in groups of four, had higher survival ratesthan did solitary queens during the period between colony establishmentand the appearance of the first workers. The advantage of cooperativedefense approximately counterbalanced the disadvantages causedby competition within foundress associations of two to threequeens. Previous studies have shown that colonies founded bymultiple queens produce larger worker populations than coloniesfounded by solitary queens; however, experimentally increasingworker number in incipient colonies had no effect on colonysurvival in the field.  相似文献   

19.
Fights among conspecific animals are normally restricted to ritualized interactions. They may escalate to serious injury and death when the contested resource has a very high value and the chances of finding alternative resources later in life are low. This appears to be the case in young queens of the ant Cardiocondylalatifrons”, a species that builds its nests in rather stable rock crevices. Young queens in small colonies without a mature queen fought violently for inheritance of the nest site and its workers. Queen aggression and subsequent attacks by workers killed about 50% of the young queens in our experimental nests. Queen killing differs qualitatively from previously reported dominance interactions among prospective female reproductives in other ants, which are mostly ritualized and allow losers to pursue alternative ways of increasing their direct or indirect fitness. Our observations add a novel case of siblicide to the previously reported lethal aggression among nestling birds, parasitoid larvae, and honey bee queens. They corroborate the hypothesis that relatedness does not play a significant role in local competition for highly limited resources.  相似文献   

20.
Schrempf A  Heinze J 《PloS one》2008,3(7):e2592

Background

According to sexual conflict theory, males can increase their own fitness by transferring substances during copulation that increase the short-term fecundity of their mating partners at the cost of the future life expectancy and re-mating capability of the latter. In contrast, sexual cooperation is expected in social insects. Mating indeed positively affects life span and fecundity of young queens of the male-polymorphic ant Cardiocondyla obscurior, even though males neither provide nuptial gifts nor any other care but leave their mates immediately after copulation and die shortly thereafter.

Principal Findings

Here, we show that mating with winged disperser males has a significantly stronger impact on life span and reproductive success of young queens of C. obscurior than mating with wingless fighter males.

Conclusions

Winged males are reared mostly under stressful environmental conditions, which force young queens to disperse and found their own societies independently. In contrast, queens that mate with wingless males under favourable conditions usually start reproducing in the safety of the established maternal nest. Our study suggests that males of C. obscurior have evolved mechanisms to posthumously assist young queens during colony founding under adverse ecological conditions.  相似文献   

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