Segers Francisca H I D, von Zuben Lucas, Grüter Christoph
Ecology. 2016 Feb;97(2):417-26. doi: 10.1890/15-0793.1.
Many colonial animals rely for their defense on a soldier caste. Adaptive colony demography theory predicts that colonies should flexibly adjust the investment in different worker castes depending on the colony needs. For example, colonies should invest more in defensive workers (e.g., soldiers) in dangerous environments. However, evidence for this prediction has been mixed. We combined descriptive and experimental approaches to examine whether defensive investment and worker size are adjusted to local ecology in the only known bee with polymorphic workers, Tetragonisca angustula. Colonies of this species are defended by a morphologically specialized soldier caste. Our study included three populations that differed in the density of food competition and the occurrence of a parasitic robber bee. We found that colonies coexisting with robber bees had on average 43% more soldiers defending the nest entrance, while colonies facing stronger foraging competition had soldiers that were -6-7% smaller. We then experimentally relocated colonies to areas with different levels of competition. When released from intense food competition, body sizes of guards and foragers increased. After introducing chemical robber bee cues at nest entrances, we found both a short-term and a long-term up-regulation of the number of soldiers defending the colony. Active soldier numbers remained high after the experiment for a duration equivalent to 2-3 worker life spans. How information about past parasite threat is stored in the colony is currently unknown. In summary, T. angustula adjusts both the number and the body size of active soldiers to local ecological conditions. Competitor density also affects forager (or minor) size, an important colony trait with potential community ecological consequences. Our study supports adaptive colony demography theory in a eusocial bee and highlights the importance of colony threats and competition as selective forces shaping colony phenotype.
许多群居动物依靠兵蚁等级来进行防御。适应性群体人口统计学理论预测,群体应根据自身需求灵活调整对不同工蚁等级的投入。例如,在危险环境中,群体应增加对防御性工蚁(如兵蚁)的投入。然而,这一预测的证据并不一致。我们结合描述性和实验性方法,来研究在唯一已知具有多态工蚁的蜜蜂——窄胸方胸蜜蜂(Tetragonisca angustula)中,防御投入和工蚁大小是否会根据当地生态环境进行调整。该物种的群体由形态特殊的兵蚁等级进行防御。我们的研究涵盖了三个在食物竞争密度和寄生盗蜜蜂出现情况上存在差异的种群。我们发现,与盗蜜蜂共存的群体平均有比其他群体多43%的兵蚁守卫巢穴入口,而面临更强觅食竞争的群体中的兵蚁体型则小6 - 7%。然后,我们通过实验将群体转移到竞争程度不同的区域。当从激烈的食物竞争中解脱出来后,守卫蜂和觅食蜂的体型增大。在巢穴入口引入盗蜜蜂的化学信号后,我们发现防御群体的兵蚁数量在短期和长期内均出现上调。实验结束后,活跃兵蚁的数量在相当于2 - 3个工蚁寿命的时间段内一直保持高位。目前尚不清楚群体是如何存储过去寄生虫威胁的信息的。总之,窄胸方胸蜜蜂会根据当地生态条件调整活跃兵蚁的数量和体型。竞争者密度也会影响觅食蜂(或小型工蚁)的体型,这是一个具有潜在群落生态后果的重要群体特征。我们的研究支持了一种群居蜜蜂中的适应性群体人口统计学理论,并强调了群体威胁和竞争作为塑造群体表型的选择力量的重要性。