Department of Zoology, Erindale College, University of Toronto, Mississauga, ON L5L 1C6, Canada.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1988 Jun;85(12):4572-5. doi: 10.1073/pnas.85.12.4572.
Three alternative hypotheses have been advanced to explain the dynamics of individually produced nestmate-recognition cues in colonies of social insects: (i) that there is no effective transfer of cues among nestmates (individual hypothesis); (ii) that cues are shared reciprocally among nestmates (collective hypothesis); and (iii) that cues derived from the queen are transferred to all colony members and dominate all other cues in nestmate recognition (queen hypothesis). In the present study, a bioassay based on aggression by laboratory colonies toward workers introduced into their nests was used in conjunction with isolation and interspecific-adoption experiments to test these hypotheses for colonies of two closely related, polygynous, and polydomous ant species, Leptothorax ambiguus and Leptothorax longispinosus. The results provide strong evidence for the collective hypothesis. A collective system has long been postulated as one of the primary modes of nestmate discrimination among social insects but to my knowledge has never before been clearly demonstrated.
(i)同巢个体之间没有有效的信号传递(个体假说);(ii)同巢个体之间互惠地共享信号(集体假说);以及(iii)来自女王的信号被传递给所有群体成员,并在同巢识别中支配所有其他信号(女王假说)。在本研究中,一种基于实验室群体对引入巢穴的工蚁的攻击性的生物测定法,结合隔离和种间收养实验,用于测试两种密切相关的、多态的、多态的蚂蚁物种——Leptothorax ambiguus 和 Leptothorax longispinosus 的群体对这些假说的验证。结果为集体假说提供了强有力的证据。集体系统长期以来一直被认为是社会性昆虫同巢识别的主要模式之一,但据我所知,它从未被明确证明过。