Habitat features and colony characteristics influencing ant personality and its fitness consequences

Abstract Several factors can influence individual and group behavioral variation that can have important fitness consequences. In this study, we tested how two habitat types (seminatural meadows and meadows invaded by Solidago plants) and factors like colony and worker size and nest density influenc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Behavioral ecology 2021-01, Vol.32 (1), p.124-137
Hauptverfasser: Maák, István, Trigos-Peral, Gema, Ślipiński, Piotr, Grześ, Irena M, Horváth, Gergely, Witek, Magdalena
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Several factors can influence individual and group behavioral variation that can have important fitness consequences. In this study, we tested how two habitat types (seminatural meadows and meadows invaded by Solidago plants) and factors like colony and worker size and nest density influence behavioral (activity, meanderness, exploration, aggression, and nest displacement) variation on different levels of the social organization of Myrmica rubra ants and how these might affect the colony productivity. We assumed that the factors within the two habitat types exert different selective pressures on individual and colony behavioral variation that affects colony productivity. Our results showed individual-/colony-specific expression of both mean and residual behavioral variation of the studied behavioral traits. Although habitat type did not have any direct effect, habitat-dependent factors, like colony size and nest density influenced the individual mean and residual variation of several traits. We also found personality at the individual-level and at the colony level. Exploration positively influenced the total- and worker production in both habitats. Worker aggression influenced all the productivity parameters in seminatural meadows, whereas activity had a positive effect on the worker and total production in invaded meadows. Our results suggest that habitat type, through its environmental characteristics, can affect different behavioral traits both at the individual and colony level and that those with the strongest effect on colony productivity primarily shape the personality of individuals. Our results highlight the need for complex environmental manipulations to fully understand the effects shaping behavior and reproduction in colony-living species. The behavior of your family can depend on the place you live and may affect the amount of resources you gain. We studied this relationship in ants living in two environmentally different meadows. Ants living in big families and in more crowded places have to be aggressive to produce more brood. Ants living in less crowded but food-limited places have to move more to reproduce successfully. Exploration skills are beneficial in both habitats.
ISSN:1045-2249
1465-7279
DOI:10.1093/beheco/araa112