Department of Ecology, Evolution & Marine Biology, University of California - Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA, USA.
Department of Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
J Evol Biol. 2019 Dec;32(12):1362-1367. doi: 10.1111/jeb.13532. Epub 2019 Sep 18.
Identifying the traits that foster group survival in contrasting environments is important for understanding local adaptation in social systems. Here, we evaluate the relationship between the aggressiveness of social spider colonies and their persistence along an elevation gradient using the Amazonian spider, Anelosimus eximius. We found that colonies of A. eximius exhibit repeatable differences in their collective aggressiveness (latency to attack prey stimuli) and that colony aggressiveness is linked with persistence in a site-specific manner. Less aggressive colonies are better able to persist at high-elevation sites, which lack colony-sustaining large-bodied prey, whereas colony aggression was not related to chance of persistence at low-elevation sites. This suggests that low aggressiveness promotes colony survival in high-elevation, prey-poor habitats, perhaps via increased tolerance to resource limitation. These data reveal that the collective phenotypes that relate to colony persistence vary by site, and thus, the path of social evolution in these environments is likely to be affected.
确定在不同环境中促进群体生存的特征对于理解社会系统的局部适应很重要。在这里,我们使用亚马逊蜘蛛 Anelosimus eximius 来评估社会蜘蛛种群的攻击性与其在海拔梯度上的持久性之间的关系。我们发现,A. eximius 的种群表现出其集体攻击性(攻击猎物刺激的潜伏期)的可重复差异,并且种群攻击性以特定于地点的方式与持久性相关。攻击性较弱的种群更能在高海拔地区生存,而高海拔地区缺乏维持种群的大型猎物,而在低海拔地区,种群的攻击性与生存机会无关。这表明低攻击性促进了高海拔、猎物稀少栖息地中的种群生存,可能是通过增加对资源限制的耐受性。这些数据表明,与种群持久性相关的集体表型因地点而异,因此,这些环境中的社会进化路径可能会受到影响。