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Defense of Food Supply by Eusocial Colonies
Authors:JOHNSON  LESLIE K; HUBBELL  STEPHEN P; FEENER  DONALD H  JR
Institution:Department of Biology, University of Iowa Iowa City, Iowa 52242 and Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute Apartado 2072, Balboa, Panama
Abstract:Overdispersion of colonies exists in many eusocial insects.Overdispersion can be generated by direct attack on coloniesor founders, by defense of space, by defense of food resourcesbeing harvested, or by exploitative competition. When directcompetitive interactions lead to colony overdispersion, territorialityis said to occur. Whereas solitary territory holders typicallydefend space, most eusocial colonies defend resource patchesrather than space per se. Also unlike solitary territory holders,colonies with forager communication can simultaneously defendseveral spatially separated food patches. A model explores optimalnumbers of scouts (discoverers of patches) and recruits (followers)needed to maximize net rate of energy intake by the colony.Territorial costs are added to the model by requiring a higherinvestment of foragers per unit resource collected. Accordingto the model, optimal colony size and percentage scouts aremore sensitive to changes in patch size than in patch density.If patch defense is required for resource control, a declineoccurs in optimal percentage of scouts; the decline is greatestfor small colonies. Colonies that must defend patches in orderto harvest from them suffer a loss in net energy intake; theloss is greatest for small colonies. It is predicted that amongeusocial insects, those with territorial defense of resourcesshould preferentially visit large patches and have comparativelylarge colony sizes and relatively few scouts. Ways of testingthese predictions are discussed.
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