Bengston S E, Dornhaus A
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, PO Box 210088, Tucson, AZ 85721-0088, USA
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, PO Box 210088, Tucson, AZ 85721-0088, USA.
Proc Biol Sci. 2014 Sep 22;281(1791):20140518. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2014.0518.
Consistent individual variation in animal behaviour is nearly ubiquitous and has important ecological and evolutionary implications. Additionally, suites of behavioural traits are often correlated, forming behavioural syndromes in both humans and other species. Such syndromes are often described by testing for variation in traits across commonly described dimensions (e.g. aggression and neophobia), independent of whether this variation is ecologically relevant to the focal species. Here, we use a variety of ecologically relevant behavioural traits to test for a colony-level behavioural syndrome in rock ants (Temnothorax rugatulus). Specifically, we combine field and laboratory assays to measure foraging effort, how colonies respond to different types of resources, activity level, response to threat and aggression level. We find evidence for a colony level syndrome that suggests colonies consistently differ in coping style--some are more risk-prone, whereas others are more risk-averse. Additionally, by collecting data across the North American range of this species, we show that environmental variation may affect how different populations maintain consistent variation in colony behaviour.
动物行为中持续存在的个体差异几乎无处不在,并且具有重要的生态和进化意义。此外,一系列行为特征通常相互关联,在人类和其他物种中都形成了行为综合征。此类综合征通常通过测试常见描述维度(如攻击性和新事物恐惧症)上的特征变化来描述,而不考虑这种变化是否与目标物种的生态相关。在这里,我们使用各种与生态相关的行为特征来测试岩蚁(Temnothorax rugatulus)群体水平的行为综合征。具体而言,我们结合野外和实验室测定来测量觅食努力、群体对不同类型资源的反应、活动水平、对威胁的反应和攻击水平。我们发现了群体水平综合征的证据,这表明不同群体在应对方式上始终存在差异——有些群体更倾向于冒险,而另一些则更规避风险。此外,通过收集该物种在北美分布范围内的数据,我们表明环境变化可能会影响不同种群如何维持群体行为的持续差异。