Competition through ritualized aggressive interactions between sympatric colonies in solitary foraging neotropical ants.

IF 2.1 3区 生物学 Q2 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES The Science of Nature Pub Date : 2024-01-30 DOI:10.1007/s00114-024-01891-y
Maria Eduarda de Lima Vieira, Serafino Teseo, Dina Lillia Oliveira de Azevedo, Nicolas Châline, Arrilton Araújo
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Abstract

Understanding the structure of food competition between conspecifics in their natural settings is paramount to addressing more complex questions in ecology, evolution, and conservation. While much research on ants focuses on aggressive food competition between large and foraging trail-using societies, we lack a thorough understanding of inter-colony competition in socially less derived, solitarily foraging species. To fill this gap, we explored the activity of ten neighbouring colonies of the giant ant Dinoponera quadriceps, monitoring 2513 foraging trips of hundreds of workers and all its inter-individual interactions. We found that, on encountering, workers from different colonies rarely engaged in aggressive fights but instead avoided each other or performed ritualised agonistic bouts. We discovered that during foraging trips, a few workers within each colony repeatedly rubbed their gaster on the substrate, a behaviour not observed in the field before. We propose that workers use this behaviour to mark the foraging area and mark more frequently in its periphery. Only 25% of the individuals specialised in this behaviour, and we hypothesise that the specialisation results from the history of interactions and experience of individual foragers. Our study suggests that workers of contiguous D. quadriceps colonies engage in low-risk conflict, mainly displaying ritualised behaviours. As these small societies mainly rely on tiny, unpredictably scattered, albeit abundant in the environment, arthropod prey, and not on persistent food sources, they do not aggressively defend exclusive foraging territories. On the other hand, colonies rely on large overlapping foraging areas to sustain their survival and growth, most often tolerating foragers from nearby colonies. We discuss whether this type of competitive interaction is expected in all solitary foraging species.

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独居觅食的新热带蚂蚁通过同域蚁群之间仪式化的攻击性互动进行竞争。
要解决生态学、进化和保护方面更复杂的问题,了解自然环境中同类之间的食物竞争结构至关重要。关于蚂蚁的许多研究都集中在大型觅食群落之间的激烈食物竞争上,而我们对社会性较弱、独自觅食的物种的群落间竞争缺乏透彻的了解。为了填补这一空白,我们对巨蚁 Dinoponera quadriceps 的十个相邻蚁群的活动进行了研究,对数百只工蚁的 2513 次觅食活动及其个体间的所有互动进行了监测。我们发现,来自不同蚁群的工蚁在相遇时很少进行攻击性搏斗,而是相互回避或进行仪式化的争斗。我们发现,在觅食过程中,每个蚁群中都有少数工蚁会反复在基质上摩擦自己的喙,这是以前从未在野外观察到的行为。我们认为,工蜂利用这种行为来标记觅食区域,并更频繁地在其外围进行标记。只有 25% 的个体专门从事这种行为,我们假设这种专门化是由个体觅食者的互动历史和经验造成的。我们的研究表明,毗连的四角蛙群落中的工蚁会发生低风险冲突,主要表现为仪式化行为。由于这些小型群落主要依赖于微小的、不可预测的、分散的节肢动物猎物,尽管这些猎物在环境中非常丰富,但它们并不依赖于持久的食物来源,因此它们不会积极地捍卫专属的觅食领地。另一方面,蚁群依靠大面积重叠的觅食区域来维持生存和生长,它们通常会容忍附近蚁群的觅食者。我们将讨论是否所有独居觅食物种都会出现这种竞争性互动。
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来源期刊
The Science of Nature
The Science of Nature 综合性期刊-综合性期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
47
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Science of Nature - Naturwissenschaften - is Springer''s flagship multidisciplinary science journal. The journal is dedicated to the fast publication and global dissemination of high-quality research and invites papers, which are of interest to the broader community in the biological sciences. Contributions from the chemical, geological, and physical sciences are welcome if contributing to questions of general biological significance. Particularly welcomed are contributions that bridge between traditionally isolated areas and attempt to increase the conceptual understanding of systems and processes that demand an interdisciplinary approach.
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