Smith Adrian A, Hölldobler Bert, Liebig Jürgen
School of Life Sciences and Center for Social Dynamics and Complexity, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287-4501, USA.
Naturwissenschaften. 2011 Mar;98(3):237-40. doi: 10.1007/s00114-011-0761-8. Epub 2011 Jan 21.
In many social taxa, reproductively dominant individuals sometimes use aggression to secure and maintain reproductive status. In the social insects, queen aggression towards subordinate individuals or workers has been documented and is predicted to occur only in species with a small colony size and a low level of queen-worker dimorphism. We report queen aggression towards reproductive workers in the ant species Aphaenogaster cockerelli, a species with a relatively large colony size and a high level of reproductive dimorphism. Through analysis of cuticular hydrocarbon profiles, we show that queens are aggressive only to reproductively active workers. Non-reproductive workers treated with a hydrocarbon typical for reproductives are attacked by workers but not by queens, which suggests different ways of recognition. We provide possible explanations of why queen aggression is observed in this species.
在许多社会性动物类群中,具有繁殖优势的个体有时会通过攻击行为来确保和维持其繁殖地位。在社会性昆虫中,蚁后对从属个体或工蚁的攻击行为已有记载,并且据预测仅会在蚁群规模较小且蚁后与工蚁形态差异程度较低的物种中出现。我们报告了在柯氏盘腹蚁(Aphaenogaster cockerelli)这一蚁种中,蚁后对具有繁殖能力的工蚁的攻击行为,该蚁种具有相对较大的蚁群规模以及较高程度的繁殖形态差异。通过对表皮碳氢化合物谱的分析,我们发现蚁后仅对具有繁殖活性的工蚁具有攻击性。用典型的繁殖型碳氢化合物处理过的非繁殖型工蚁会受到工蚁的攻击,但不会受到蚁后的攻击,这表明存在不同的识别方式。我们对为何在该物种中观察到蚁后攻击行为提供了可能的解释。