TY - JOUR
T1 - Alternative mating behaviors of the queen polymorphic ant Temnothorax longispinosus
AU - Howard, Kenneth J.
AU - Kennedy, David
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments Special thanks to Robert Jeanne for guidance in setting up this study, refining the methods, and revising this manuscript. We also thank Larry and Nancy Dewey, Roland Rueckerts, and Jeff Baylis for permission to collect ants on their property. The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, Dane County Parks Division, and the City of Madison Parks Division all gave permission to collect in their parks. Jeffrey Lewis helped care for ants in the laboratory in 2005. The research was supported by the Department of Zoology and the College of Agricultural and Life Sciences, University of Wisconsin, Madison.
Copyright:
Copyright 2008 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2007/11
Y1 - 2007/11
N2 - Mating behaviors of ants fall into two categories: female calling, in which a female alate releases pheromones that attract males, and male swarming, in which large male aggregations attract females. Female calling is common in species with queens that return to their natal nest to found colonies dependently after mating, while male swarming is common in species with queens that disperse to found independently. In some species that display both founding strategies, a queen-size polymorphism has evolved in which dependent-founding queens are smaller than independent-founding queens. Dependent founding is likely difficult if gynes (virgin queens) are mating in distant swarms. Therefore, a queen may adopt one or the other mating strategy based on its size and founding behavior. We investigated mating behaviors in the queen-polymorphic ant, Temnothorax longispinosus. Observations in laboratory mating arenas indicated that small gynes exhibited significantly lower flight activity than large gynes. Both forms mated in male swarms, and neither form exhibited female calling. The reduced flight activity of the small morph may facilitate returning to the natal nest after mating, provided the mating swarm is located nearby. Therefore, alternative colony-founding behaviors may be possible without the evolution of female-calling behavior; however, the reduced flight activity of small morphs may require that mating swarms are not distant from the natal nest.
AB - Mating behaviors of ants fall into two categories: female calling, in which a female alate releases pheromones that attract males, and male swarming, in which large male aggregations attract females. Female calling is common in species with queens that return to their natal nest to found colonies dependently after mating, while male swarming is common in species with queens that disperse to found independently. In some species that display both founding strategies, a queen-size polymorphism has evolved in which dependent-founding queens are smaller than independent-founding queens. Dependent founding is likely difficult if gynes (virgin queens) are mating in distant swarms. Therefore, a queen may adopt one or the other mating strategy based on its size and founding behavior. We investigated mating behaviors in the queen-polymorphic ant, Temnothorax longispinosus. Observations in laboratory mating arenas indicated that small gynes exhibited significantly lower flight activity than large gynes. Both forms mated in male swarms, and neither form exhibited female calling. The reduced flight activity of the small morph may facilitate returning to the natal nest after mating, provided the mating swarm is located nearby. Therefore, alternative colony-founding behaviors may be possible without the evolution of female-calling behavior; however, the reduced flight activity of small morphs may require that mating swarms are not distant from the natal nest.
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U2 - 10.1007/s00114-007-0281-8
DO - 10.1007/s00114-007-0281-8
M3 - Article
C2 - 17653686
AN - SCOPUS:34948817218
SN - 0028-1042
VL - 94
SP - 945
EP - 950
JO - Naturwissenschaften
JF - Naturwissenschaften
IS - 11
ER -