Social buffering in a eusocial invertebrate: termite soldiers reduce the lethal impact of competitor cues on workers

While the impact of predator-induced stress on prey has received considerable attention, there has been far less research into the effect of competitors. Cues from aggressive competitors should be particularly likely to evoke behavioral and/or physiological responses, since they may be indicative of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecology (Durham) 2017-04, Vol.98 (4), p.952-960
Hauptverfasser: Tian, Li, Preisser, Evan L., Haynes, Kenneth F., Zhou, Xuguo
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container_issue 4
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container_title Ecology (Durham)
container_volume 98
creator Tian, Li
Preisser, Evan L.
Haynes, Kenneth F.
Zhou, Xuguo
description While the impact of predator-induced stress on prey has received considerable attention, there has been far less research into the effect of competitors. Cues from aggressive competitors should be particularly likely to evoke behavioral and/or physiological responses, since they may be indicative of both direct (interference) and indirect (exploitative) threats. The danger posed by such competitors, and the "fear" they evoke, should be reduced at lower competitor densities and by the presence of individual conspecifics specialized for defense. We assessed how Reticulitermes flavipes termite workers and soldiers were affected by cues from conspecific nestmates, conspecific non-nestmates, and the heterospecific competitor R. virginicus. Competitor cues altered flavipes worker and soldier behavior, decreasing worker growth and increasing their mortality. The presence of flavipes soldiers largely ameliorated these negative impacts: adding even a single soldier (5% of flavipes individuals) decreased worker mortality by 50–80%. Although worker mortality increased with competitor density, increased soldier densities did not increase the benefit to workers. The small number of soldiers required to substantially alter cue-mediated interactions suggests that this caste, in addition to providing direct defense, also occupies a "keystone role" by providing homeostatic feedback to workers functioning in stressful environments.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/ecy.1746
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Chemical ecology
Competition
Conspecifics
Cues
Defensive behavior
Density
Ecology
Entomology
eusociality
Fear
Feedback
Hazards
Interference
interference competition
Invertebrates
Job stress
Military defense
Mortality
Mortality rates
nonlethal effects
Physiological responses
Physiology
Predation
Predators
Prey
Psychological stress
Reticulitermes flavipes
Reticulitermes virginicus
risk cues
Social behavior
soldiers
Soldiers (insect caste)
Stress
Stresses
Termites
Worker insects
Workers (insect caste)
title Social buffering in a eusocial invertebrate: termite soldiers reduce the lethal impact of competitor cues on workers
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