Kamath Ambika, Primavera Skylar D, Wright Colin M, Doering Grant N, Sheehy Kirsten A, Pinter-Wollman Noa, Pruitt Jonathan N
Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Marine Biology, University of California Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, USA.
Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management & Miller Institute for Basic Research in Science, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, USA.
Behav Ecol. 2019 Jan-Feb;30(1):39-47. doi: 10.1093/beheco/ary158. Epub 2018 Dec 8.
The physical environment occupied by group-living animals can profoundly affect their cooperative social interactions and therefore their collective behavior and success. These effects can be especially apparent in human-modified habitats, which often harbor substantial variation in the physical environments available within them. For nest-building animal societies, this influence of the physical environment on collective behavior can be mediated by the construction of nests-nests could either buffer animal behavior from changes in the physical environment or facilitate shifts in behavior through changes in nest structure. We test these alternative hypotheses by examining the differences in collective prey-attacking behavior and colony persistence between fence-dwelling and tree-dwelling colonies of social spiders. Fences and trees represent substantially different physical environments: fences are 2-dimensional and relatively homogenous environments, whereas tree branches are 3-dimensional and relatively heterogeneous. We found that fence-dwelling colonies attack prey more quickly and with more attackers than tree-dwelling colonies in both field and controlled settings. Moreover, in the field, fence-dwelling colonies captured more prey, were more likely to persist, and had a greater number of individuals remaining at the end of the experiment than tree-dwelling colonies. Intriguingly, we also observed a greater propensity for colony fragmentation in tree-dwelling colonies than fence-dwelling colonies. Our results demonstrate that the physical environment is an important influence on the collective behavior and persistence of colonies of social spiders, and suggest multiple possible proximate and ultimate mechanisms-including variation in web complexity, dispersal behavior, and bet-hedging-by which this influence may be realized.
群居动物所处的物理环境会深刻影响它们的合作性社会互动,进而影响它们的集体行为和生存繁衍。这些影响在人类改造的栖息地中可能尤为明显,这类栖息地中的物理环境往往存在很大差异。对于筑巢动物群体而言,物理环境对集体行为的这种影响可能通过巢穴的建造来调节——巢穴既可以缓冲动物行为免受物理环境变化的影响,也可以通过巢穴结构的变化促进行为的转变。我们通过研究群居蜘蛛在围栏栖息和树木栖息群体之间的集体捕食行为和群体持久性差异,来检验这些不同的假设。围栏和树木代表了截然不同的物理环境:围栏是二维且相对均匀的环境,而树枝是三维且相对多样的。我们发现,在野外和受控环境中,围栏栖息群体攻击猎物的速度更快,参与攻击的个体也比树木栖息群体更多。此外,在野外,围栏栖息群体捕获的猎物更多,更有可能持续存在,并且在实验结束时剩余的个体数量比树木栖息群体更多。有趣的是,我们还观察到树木栖息群体比围栏栖息群体有更大的群体分裂倾向。我们的结果表明,物理环境对群居蜘蛛群体的集体行为和持久性有重要影响,并提出了多种可能的近因和远因机制,包括蛛网复杂性、扩散行为和风险对冲等方面的差异,通过这些机制可能实现这种影响。