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Effect of body size on aggression in the ant, Cataglyphis niger (Hymenoptera; Formicidae)

✍ Scribed by Elise Nowbahari; Renée Fénéron; Marie-Claire Malherbe


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
161 KB
Volume
25
Category
Article
ISSN
0096-140X

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✦ Synopsis


In polymorphic ants, such as Cataglyphis niger, sterile individual workers from the same nest show some degree of variation in size and/or morphology. We studied whether worker size and size difference between opponents had an effect on aggression during conspecific encounters. Although the capacity to recognize nestmates was shared by all individuals, some patterns of agonistic behaviors were size related. Escape was mostly displayed by the small workers, and threat, associated with ritualized fights, by the large workers. As game theory predicted, ants of C. niger adjusted their level of aggression as a function of the size of the opponent. However, only large individuals used such assessment strategies, responding with escalation of aggression towards small workers and reduction of aggression towards large ones. On the contrary, small individuals behaved in the same manner whatever the opponent's size. Differences between both morphological castes were discussed with reference to the resource holding assessment models.


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