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Social Structure and Genetic Distance Mediate Nestmate Recognition and Aggressiveness in the Facultative Polygynous Ant Pheidole pallidula

机译:社会结构和遗传距离介导兼性多妇科蚂蚁Pheidole pallidula的巢伙伴识别和攻击性。

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摘要

In social insects, the evolutionary stability of cooperation depends on the privileged relationships between individuals of the social group, which is facilitated by the recognition of relatives. Nestmate recognition is based on genetically determined cues and/or environmentally derived chemical components present on the cuticle of individuals. Here, we studied nestmate recognition in the ant Pheidole pallidula, a species where both single-queen (monogyne) and multiple-queen (polygyne) colonies co-occur in the same population. We combined geographical, genetic and chemical analyses to disentangle the factors influencing the level of intraspecific aggressiveness. We show that encounters between workers from neighbouring colonies (i.e., nests less than 5 m away) are on average less aggressive than those between workers from more distant colonies. Aggressive behaviour is associated with the level of genetic difference: workers from monogyne colonies are more aggressive than workers from polygyne colonies, and the intensity of aggressiveness is positively associated with the genetic distance between colonies. Since the genetic distance is correlated with the spatial distance between pairs of colonies, the lower level of aggression toward neighbours may result from their higher relatedness. In contrast, the analysis of overall cuticular hydrocarbon profiles shows that aggressive behaviour is associated neither with the chemical diversity of colonies, nor with the chemical distances between them. When considering methyl-branched alkanes only, however, chemical distances differed between monogyne and polygyne colonies and were significantly associated with aggressiveness. Altogether, these results show that the social structure of colonies and the genetic distances between colonies are two major factors influencing the intensity of agonistic behaviours in the ant P. pallidula.
机译:在社交昆虫中,合作的进化稳定性取决于社交群体个体之间的特权关系,而这种关系得益于对亲属的认可。 Nestmate识别基于个体表皮上存在的遗传决定线索和/或环境衍生的化学成分。在这里,我们研究了苍白蚁(Pheidole pallidula)中的蚁巢识别,该物种在同一种群中同时存在单巢(monogyne)和多巢(polygyne)两个菌落。我们结合了地理,遗传和化学分析,以弄清影响种内侵袭性水平的因素。我们证明,与来自较远殖民地的工人之间的遭遇相比,来自邻近殖民地(即小于5 m的巢)的工人之间的遭遇平均而言较不积极。攻击行为与遗传差异程度有关:单性生殖菌落的工人比多性生殖菌落的工人更具侵略性,侵略性的强度与菌落之间的遗传距离呈正相关。由于遗传距离与成对的菌落之间的空间距离相关,因此对邻居的侵略性较低可能是由于它们的高度相关性。相反,对整体表皮碳氢化合物剖面的分析表明,侵略性行为既不与菌落的化学多样性相关,也不与菌落之间的化学距离有关。然而,仅考虑甲基支链烷烃时,单炔和聚炔菌落之间的化学距离不同,并且与攻击性显着相关。总之,这些结果表明,菌落的社会结构和菌落之间的遗传距离是影响苍白蚁蚂蚁激动行为强度的两个主要因素。

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