Evolution, Ecology and Genetics, Research School of Biology, Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory 0200, Australia.
Am Nat. 2010 May;175(5):E119-25. doi: 10.1086/651588.
Neighboring territory owners are often less aggressive toward each other than to strangers ("dear enemy" effect). There is, however, little evidence for territorial defense coalitions whereby a neighbor will temporarily leave his/her own territory, enter that of a neighbor, and cooperate in repelling a conspecific intruder. This is surprising, as theoreticians have long posited the existence of such coalitions and the circumstances under which they should evolve. Here we document territorial defense coalitions in the African fiddler crab Uca annulipes, which lives in large colonies wherein each male defends a burrow and its surrounding area against neighbors and "floaters" (burrowless males). Fights between a resident and a floater sometimes involve another male who has left his territory to fight the floater challenging his neighbor. Using simple experiments, we provide the first evidence of the rules determining when territorial coalitions form. Our results support recent models that suggest that these coalitions arise from by-product mutualism.
相邻领地所有者之间通常比与陌生人之间的攻击性更小(“亲爱的敌人”效应)。然而,几乎没有证据表明存在领地防御联盟,即一个邻居会暂时离开自己的领地,进入邻居的领地,并合作击退同种入侵的个体。这令人惊讶,因为理论家们长期以来一直假设存在这样的联盟,以及它们应该在何种情况下进化。在这里,我们记录了生活在大型群体中的非洲招潮蟹 Uca annulipes 的领地防御联盟,每个雄性都在保护自己的洞穴及其周围区域免受邻居和“漂流者”(无洞穴的雄性)的侵害。居民和漂流者之间的战斗有时涉及另一个雄性,他离开自己的领地去与挑战他邻居的漂流者战斗。通过简单的实验,我们提供了第一个关于决定何时形成领地联盟的规则的证据。我们的结果支持了最近的模型,这些模型表明这些联盟是由副产品互惠关系产生的。