Growth-related changes in predation behavior in incipient colonies of the ponerine antEctatomma tuberculatum (Olivier) |
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Authors: | A. Dejean J. -P. Lachaud |
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Affiliation: | (1) Centra de Investigaciones de Quintana Roo, A.P. 886, Cancun, 77500 Quintana Roo, Mexico;(2) Laboratoire d'Ethologie et Sociobiologie, URA CNRS n ° 667, Université Paris XIII, 93430 Villetaneuse, France;(3) Centre de Recherche en Biologie du Comportement, URA CNRS n ° 664, Université Paul-Sabatier, 31062 Toulouse Cédex, France |
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Abstract: | Summary We traced the development in the laboratory of 18 young colonies of the arboricolous ponerine antEctatomma tuberculatum. Colony foundation is of the partially-claustral type. During the early stages, when the colony is entirely dependent on the queen's behavior, the growth of the colony in terms of number of workers produced over time was relatively predictable. Afterwards, divergence in colony growth in function of the time increases as fast as the number of workers influences the efficiency of colony provisioning.Comparative analysis indicated clear changes in the predation behavior of foundresses and workers as colonies developed. For any stage of colony growth, all individuals provisioned the nest with dead prey or sugar-rich substances in the same way. However, prey hunting involves two different strategies. Foundresses and nanitic workers (originating from colonies with 9–15 workers) foraged actively, catching prey as the result of random encounters. Post-nanitic foragers (originating from colonies with 20–30 workers) and those from nature colonies developed an ambush strategy. Workers in these colonies gained experience at catching and handling prey during a period when they acted as nest guards, and so tended to be more efficient hunters than poorly experienced foundresses or nanitic foragers. The change in strategy was also positively correlated with an increase in the size of workers as the colony matured. A stable maximum in workers size is apparently reached only after the appearance of efficiently hunting foragers, presumably in numbers sufficient to provide adequate quantity and quality of larval food. Such a correlation between worker size and colony growth, assumed general for all ants, has not been demonstrated for Ponerinae before this work. |
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Keywords: | Ants colony growth development of behavior predation strategy guarding behavior |
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