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- Title
Carbohydrate scarcity increases foraging activities and aggressiveness in the ant Prolasius advenus ( Hymenoptera: Formicidae).
- Authors
GRANGIER, JULIEN; LESTER, PHILIP J.
- Abstract
1. Behavioural responses to varying macronutrient availability are increasingly studied in highly invasive ant species to better understand their ecological success. However, such work is lacking in relation to native ant species confronted with biological invaders. 2. Here the link between diet and behaviour was examined in Prolasius advenus, a native ant from New Zealand facing intense competition for food with invasive insects, including social wasps. A long-term laboratory experiment was conducted to assess the impact of protein and carbohydrate restriction on several behavioural parameters. 3. Ants shifted their food-collecting activity towards the least available macronutrient in both protein-limited and carbohydrate-limited colonies. But when lacking carbohydrate, they also strongly increased their efforts to discover resources. After 10 weeks, the proportion of the colony patrolling outside of the nest was eight times higher than at the initiation of the experiment. This high patrolling activity was then maintained for several weeks and resulted in a higher efficiency to explore a novel territory. Moreover, ants fed a carbohydrate-limited diet engaged in longer aggressive acts towards conspecifics. 4. These behavioural responses to carbohydrate scarcity may, in part, enhance the ability of P. advenus to resist a competing invader under natural conditions. While much of the previous research has linked diet and behavioural dominance in invasive ants, the present study shows that conducting similar investigations in the native species to which they are confronted may shed light on the mechanisms behind biotic resistance and the ability of some native species to coexist with highly abundant invaders.
- Subjects
SPECTRUM analysis; CARBOHYDRATES; FORAGING behavior; ECOLOGY; ANTS; HYMENOPTERA
- Publication
Ecological Entomology, 2014, Vol 39, Issue 6, p684
- ISSN
0307-6946
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/een.12146