Nestmate recognition in social wasps: the origin and acquisition of recognition odours |
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Affiliation: | 2. Institute for Regenerative Medicine, Biomedical Engineering, Wake Forest Medical School, Winston Salem, NC, United States;1. Biology, St. Norbert College, De Pere, WI 54115, United States;2. Department of Biology, American University, Washington, DC 20016, United States;3. Department of Psychology, American University, Washington, DC 20016, United States |
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Abstract: | Laboratory studies of nestmate recognition in gynes (potential queens) of the social wasp, Polistes fuscatus, indicate that recognition odours have both a heritable and an environmental component. In addition, both endogenous odours (acquired as brood) and adult-acquired odours appear to mediate nestmate recognition. Heritable and environmental, as well as endogenous and adult-acquired recognition odours, are not additive in their effect on tolerance, suggesting a ‘cue similarity threshold’ model of recognition rather than a model that postulates tolerance continuouusly increasing with increasing degree of similarity between the learned and perceived cue. Young gynes (1·7–71·8 h after emergence) clearly possess recognition odours and there is no evidence that the age of a young gyne affects its expression of recognition odours. The failure of a wasp, isolated from its natal nest at emergence, to recognize its nestmates is due to the disruption of its learning of recognition odours, not to its acquisition of recognition odours. Gynes appear not to learn recognition odours directly from themselves. Young gynes deprived of the opportunity to learn recognition odours from their natal nest treat all gynes as nestmates, regardless of relatedness. This latter result, together with additional evidence, suggests that the ontogeny of nestmate recognition ability involves the development of intolerance to unfamiliar odours rather than the development of tolerance to familiar odours. |
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