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Low intraspecific aggression level in the polydomous and facultative polygynous ant Ectatomma tuberculatum
Authors:L. Zinck ,R.R. Hora,N. Châ  line,&   P. Jaisson
Affiliation:Laboratoire d'Ethologie Expérimentale et Comparée (UMR CNRS 7153), UniversitéParis 13, 99 Avenue J.-B. Clément, 93430 Villetaneuse, France;;Laboratório de Mirmecologia, Centro de Pesquisas do Cacau, C.P.7, Itabuna, Bahia, Brazil
Abstract:Nestmate recognition is a key feature of social insects, as it preserves colony integrity. However, discrimination of non‐nestmates and nestmate recognition mechanisms are highly variable according to species and social systems. Here, we investigated the intraspecific level of aggression in the facultative polygynous and polydomous ant, Ectatomma tuberculatum Olivier (Hymenoptera: Formicidae: Ectatomminae), in a population with a strong genetic structure. We found that the intraspecific level of aggression was generally low in this population of E. tuberculatum. However, the level of aggression was significantly correlated with the geographical distance, suggesting that both genetic and environmental cues could be involved in nestmate recognition and discrimination mechanisms. Moreover, polydomy was confirmed by the absence of aggression between workers from nests at a distance of 3 m, while the level of aggression was significantly higher between workers from nests separated by a distance of 10 or 1300 m. Field experiments showed that the low level of aggression between neighbouring colonies was associated with shared foraging areas, which could suggest that familiarization processes may occur in this species. We propose that the particular social organization of this species, with secondary polygyny, polydomy, and budding, may have favoured a high acceptance threshold, because of the low probability of interactions with unrelated conspecifics, the high cost of erroneously rejecting nestmates, and the low cost of accepting non‐nestmate workers. The resulting open recognition system can thus allow privileged relationships between neighbouring colonies and promote the ecological dominance of E. tuberculatum in the mosaic of arboreal ants.
Keywords:Hymenoptera    Formicidae    nestmate recognition    discrimination    acceptance threshold    territoriality    polygyny    polydomy    unicoloniality
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