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Raiding Activity of an Obligate (Polyergus breviceps) and Two Facultative (Formica puberula and F. gynocrates) Slave-Making Ants
Authors:Jeremy M Bono  Emily R Gordon  Michael F Antolin  Joan M Herbers
Institution:(1) Department of Biology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523, USA;(2) Department of Biosciences, Simon Fraser University, 8888 University Way, Burnaby, BC, V5A 1S6, Canada;(3) Current address: College of Biological Sciences, Ohio State University, 105 Biological Sciences Building, 484 W. 12th Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43210, USA
Abstract:Slave-making ants are social parasites that exploit the labor of workers from their host species by keeping them captive in the slave-maker nest. Slave-makers vary in their degree of specialization, ranging from obligate slave-makers that cannot survive without captives, to facultative slave-makers, which are often found living independently. Our study system included one obligate slave-maker, Polyergus breviceps, two facultative slave-makers, Formica puberula and F. gynocrates, and two hosts, F. occulta and F. sp. cf. argentea. We observed all raids conducted during two raiding seasons by seven P. breviceps colonies, two F. puberula colonies, and two F. gynocrates colonies. We report on raiding frequency, average raid distances, and then compare the probability of being raided multiple times in a single raiding season for the two host species. We also report on the spatial distribution of slave raids, which suggests that slave-makers avoid raiding in areas used by other slave-maker colonies. This is the first report of raiding activity for P. breviceps in this location, and the first report of raiding activity of any kind for F. puberula and F. gynocrates.
Keywords:social parasites  raiding behavior                  Polyergus                                Formica sanguinea                ants
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