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Phenotype and individual investment in cooperative foundress associations of the fire ant, Solenopsis invicta
Authors:Bernasoni  Giorgina; Keller  Laurent
Institution:Institute of Zoology, University of Berne Ethologische Station Hasli, CH-3032 Hinterkappelen, Switzerland, and Institute of Zoology and Animal Ecology, University of Lausanne Bâtiment de Biologic, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland
Abstract:Fire ant (Solenopsis invida) queens founding a colony with unrelatednest mates potentially face a trade-off. Increased individualinvestment enhances worker production, colony survival, andgrowth. However, increased investment may reduce a queen's probabilityof surviving fights that invariably arise after worker eclosion.Indeed, previous studies showed that queens lose less weight(a measure of investment) when initiating colonies with cofoundressesthan when alone, and that within associations the queen losingmore weight is more likely to die. In this study, we testedwhether queens adjust weight loss to social environment andfighting ability and whether restraining weight loss directlyincreases survival prospects. Experimental manipulation of coloniesshowed that reduced investment by queens within associationsis primarily a response to the presence of a nest mate and notsimply a response to per-queen brood-care demands. Differencesin head width were associated with relative and combined weightloss of cofoundresses, as well as with queen survival. In contrast,the investment strategies of queens were not significantly influencedby their nest mates' initial weight. Similarly, manipulationof the queens' relative weight by feeding and exposure to contrastingsocial environment (queens kept alone or in groups) did notsignificantly affect survivaL These results indicate that headwidth differences or correlated phenotypic atthbutes of fightingability influenced both investment strategies and survival probabilityof queens. That queens with larger heads invested less energyinto brood rearing and were more likely to survive reveals moreselfish interactions among cofoundresses than has previouslybeen assumed and casts some doubts about the idea that groupselection must be invoked to account for the maintenance ofcooperation in foundress associations of ants.
Keywords:ants  body size  conflict  cooperation  Solesnopsis invicta  
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