Turza Filip, Stec Daniel, Fontaneto Diego, Miler Krzysztof
Doctoral School of Exact and Natural Sciences, Jagiellonian University, prof. S. Łojasiewicza 11, 30-348 Kraków, Poland.
Institute of Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Jagiellonian University, Gronostajowa 7, 30-387 Kraków, Poland.
Behav Ecol. 2024 Dec 17;36(3):arae104. doi: 10.1093/beheco/arae104. eCollection 2025 May-Jun.
Rescue behavior aims to free a relative from danger. Ants are particularly known for such helpfulness and, perhaps not coincidentally, also show the highest level of social organization in the animal kingdom, i.e. eusociality. However, even among social species such as ants, there is a huge variation in rescue proneness, and little is understood about the underlying causes of this variation. In this study, we explore the relationship between helpfulness in the form of rescue and life expectancy, focusing on 14 ant species with diverse phylogenetic backgrounds. We posit that species with longer worker life expectancies are more prone to engaging in rescue actions. To test this, we assessed worker lifespan in each species and conducted behavioral tests simulating entrapment scenarios involving a nestmate ensnared by an artificial obstacle. Observed behaviors involved contact with the nestmate, digging around it, pulling at its body parts, and biting the entrapping obstacle. Our findings reveal that species with longer worker life expectancies exhibit higher proneness to rescue endangered nestmates, irrespective of phylogenetic relatedness. Furthermore, we found no trace of a phylogenetic signal in the life expectancies or helpfulness of workers belonging to different species. The results underscore the significance of life expectancy as a key factor influencing the likelihood of rescue behavior in ants. This phenomenon warrants further investigation, given the varied physiologies, life histories, and ecologies observed among species. Nevertheless, the impact of life expectancy on behavioral patterns in social insects suggests that this parameter is likely significant across diverse taxa.
救援行为旨在将亲属从危险中解救出来。蚂蚁尤其以这种乐于助人的行为而闻名,而且或许并非巧合的是,它们在动物王国中也展现出了最高水平的社会组织形式,即真社会性。然而,即使在蚂蚁这类社会性物种中,救援倾向也存在巨大差异,而对于这种差异的潜在原因却知之甚少。在本研究中,我们聚焦于14种具有不同系统发育背景的蚂蚁物种,探讨以救援形式表现出的帮助行为与预期寿命之间的关系。我们假定工蚁预期寿命较长的物种更倾向于采取救援行动。为了验证这一点,我们评估了每个物种中工蚁的寿命,并进行了行为测试,模拟涉及被人工障碍物困住的巢友的被困场景。观察到的行为包括与巢友接触、在其周围挖掘、拉扯其身体部位以及咬困住的障碍物。我们的研究结果表明,无论系统发育相关性如何,工蚁预期寿命较长的物种对拯救濒危巢友表现出更高的倾向。此外,我们在不同物种工蚁的预期寿命或帮助行为中未发现系统发育信号的痕迹。这些结果强调了预期寿命作为影响蚂蚁救援行为可能性的关键因素的重要性。鉴于不同物种间观察到的生理特征、生活史和生态各异,这一现象值得进一步研究。尽管如此,预期寿命对社会性昆虫行为模式的影响表明,这一参数在不同分类群中可能都很重要。