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Effect of group size on the aggression strategy of an extirpating stingless bee, Trigona spinipes
Authors:J. C. Nieh  K. Kruizinga  L. S. Barreto  F. A. L. Contrera  V. L. Imperatriz-Fonseca
Affiliation:(1) Division of Biological Sciences, Section of Ecology, Behavior, and Evolution, University of California San Diego, Mail Code 0116, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA;(2) Laboratorio de Abelhas (LABE), Empresa Baiana de Desenvolvimento Agricola, Av. Ademar de Barros N 967, Salvador- Bahia, Brasil;(3) Instituto de Biociências, Laboratório de Abelhas, Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, 05508-900, SP, Brazil
Abstract:Summary. Group aggression influences communication and defense strategies in many social insect communities. Such aggression plays a particularly significant role in the lives of stingless bees, important native Neotropical pollinators, in which the battle for food resources can be deadly and critical to colony survival. However, the effects of group size on individual aggression levels and the spatio-temporal aggression strategy of communal aggressors have not been fully explored. We therefore investigated how group size affects the aggression levels and the spatio-temporal attack strategy (which body parts, and the amount of time spent in attacking each part) in close combats between Trigona spinipes foragers and a natural competitor, Melipona rufiventris. In all trials, T. spinipes foragers competitively excluded M. rufiventris foragers from nearby feeders, exhibiting four levels of aggressive behavior ranging from threat displays to prolonged grappling and decapitation. Surprisingly, aggression levels and spatial strategy corresponded to the size of group attacks. Larger groups of attackers used individually lower aggression levels than small groups of attackers. Smaller groups also attacked appendages linked to escape (legs and wings) with greater frequency than larger groups, which focused on vital central body areas (abdomen, thorax, and head). Increased aggression corresponded to increased risks for attackers and the attacked. All combatants engaging at the highest level of aggression died (100% mortality). Thus the dominance style of T. spinipes may minimize attack risk and maximize victim harm with finely tuned hostility.Received 22 May 2004; revised 18 August 2004; accepted 26 October 2004.
Keywords:Group effects  aggression  stingless bees  competition  foraging
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