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Body size but not colony size increases with altitude in the holarctic ant,Leptothorax acervorum
Authors:ABEL BERNADOU  CHRISTINE RÖMERMANN  NANA GRATIASHVILI  JÜRGEN HEINZE
Institution:1. Zoology/Evolutionary Biology, Regensburg University, Regensburg, Germany;2. Plant Biodiversity, Institute of Systematic Botany, Friedrich‐Schiller University Jena, Jena, Germany;3. Institute of Zoology, Ilia State University, Tbilisi, Georgia
Abstract:1. Bergmann's rule states that organisms inhabiting colder environments show an increase in body size or mass in comparison to their conspecifics living in warmer climates. Although originally proposed for homoeothermic vertebrates, this rule was later extended to ectotherms. In social insects, only a few studies have tested this rule and the results were ambiguous. Here, ‘body size’ can be considered at two different levels (the size of the individual workers or the size of the colony). 2. In this study, data from 53 nests collected along altitudinal gradients in the Alps were used to test the hypotheses that the worker body size and colony size of the ant Leptothorax acervorum increase with increasing altitude and therefore follow Bergmann's rule. 3. The results show that the body size of workers but not the colony size increases with altitude. Whether this pattern is driven by starvation resistance or other mechanisms remains to be investigated.
Keywords:Bergmann's rule  elevation  life‐history trait  worker size
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