Should I stay or should I go now? Patch use by African army ant colonies in relation to food availability and predation

被引:5
|
作者
Schoening, C. [1 ]
Shepard, L.
Sen, A. [2 ]
Kinuthia, W. [3 ]
Ogutu, J. O. [4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Landerinst Bienenkunde, D-16540 Hohen Neuendorf, Germany
[2] Penn State Univ, Dept Biol, Mueller Lab 208, University Pk, PA 16802 USA
[3] Natl Museums Kenya, Invertebrate Sect, Dept Zool, Nairobi 00100, Kenya
[4] Int Livestock Res Inst, Nairobi 00100, Kenya
[5] Univ Hohenheim, Inst Kulturpflanzenwissensch, D-70599 Stuttgart, Germany
关键词
Army ants; Dorylus molestus; Nest relocation; Nomadism; Predation; DORYLUS ANOMMA MOLESTUS; MARGINAL VALUE THEOREM; DRIVER ANTS; HYMENOPTERA-FORMICIDAE; SPATIAL-PATTERNS; DECISION-MAKING; EMIGRATION; BEHAVIOR; DORYLINAE; ECOLOGY;
D O I
10.1007/s00040-011-0172-z
中图分类号
Q96 [昆虫学];
学科分类号
摘要
Army ant colonies do not have permanent nests but frequently move to new patches. Local food depletion is considered the ultimate cause of this nomadic behaviour, but the proximate causes are not well understood. We tested if and how patch departure time of the aboveground-hunting army ant Dorylus molestus under field conditions is influenced by food availability and nest attacks by predators. In the first food supplement experiment, colonies receiving additional food throughout an entire nest stay did not reside in their nests for longer periods than control colonies. However, the distances travelled by colonies after nest stays during which colonies obtained food were shorter than those before these nest stays, indicating that colonies do assess food availability and avoid moving too far away from patches of high food availability. In the second food supplement experiment, in which colonies were given even larger amounts of food in the second half of their nest stay to mimic a rich unpredictable food source that these highly polyphagous predators are likely to encounter sometimes, patch departure times likewise did not differ between treated and control colonies. Either patch departure time is independent of food availability or there is another, as yet unappreciated proximate cause of colony movements in this species which we were unable to control for in our field experiments. One possibility is that encounters between neighbouring colonies influence patch departure time. In the experiment on the effect of predation, colonies responded to simulated nest attacks by mammals by leaving nests almost instantaneously and thus much earlier than control colonies. Rapid nest evacuation is likely a response to minimize the probability of repeat attacks by predators which cannot be repelled in other ways. Future studies will be necessary to definitively determine whether food availability influences patch departure times and to elucidate the consequences of colony encounters.
引用
收藏
页码:335 / 343
页数:9
相关论文
共 43 条
  • [21] Should I Stay or Should I Go: Influences on Roseate Terns' (Sterna dougallii) Decisions to Move the Chicks
    Baillie, Shauna M.
    Brunton, Dianne H.
    Boyne, Andrew W.
    NORTHEASTERN NATURALIST, 2014, 21 (03) : 380 - 396
  • [22] Should I Stay or Should I Go? - Influencing Context Factors for Users' Decisions to Charge or Refuel Their Vehicles
    Philipsen, Ralf
    Brell, Teresa
    Biermann, Hannah
    Eickels, Teresa
    Brost, Waldemar
    Ziefle, Martina
    ADVANCES IN HUMAN FACTORS OF TRANSPORTATION, 2020, 964 : 573 - 584
  • [23] Should I Stay or Should I Go? Predicting Dating Relationship Stability From Four Aspects of Commitment
    Rhoades, Galena K.
    Stanley, Scott M.
    Markman, Howard J.
    JOURNAL OF FAMILY PSYCHOLOGY, 2010, 24 (05) : 543 - 550
  • [24] "Should I stay or should I go": experience does not make the expert in police snap decision-making
    Tejeiro, Ricardo
    Shortland, Neil
    Paramio, Alberto
    Alison, Laurence
    Gonzalez, Jose Luis
    POLICING-AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF POLICE STRATEGIES & MANAGEMENT, 2024, 47 (04) : 709 - 719
  • [25] Should I stay or should I go? The settlement-inducing protein complex guides barnacle settlement decisions
    Kotsiri, Manto
    Protopapa, Maria
    Mouratidis, Sofoklis
    Zachariadis, Michael
    Vassilakos, Demetrios
    Kleidas, Ioannis
    Samiotaki, Martina
    Dedos, Skarlatos G.
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY, 2018, 221 (22)
  • [26] Should I stay or should I go? How the human brain manages the trade-off between exploitation and exploration
    Cohen, Jonathan D.
    McClure, Samuel M.
    Yu, Angela J.
    PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2007, 362 (1481) : 933 - 942
  • [27] Should I Stay or Should I Go? Cognitive Modeling of Left-Turn Gap Acceptance Decisions in Human Drivers
    Zgonnikov, Arkady
    Abbink, David
    Markkula, Gustav
    HUMAN FACTORS, 2024, 66 (05) : 1399 - 1413
  • [28] Should I stay or should I go? Individual movement decisions during group departures in red-fronted lemurs
    Sperber, Anna Lucia
    Kappeler, Peter M.
    Fichtel, Claudia
    ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE, 2019, 6 (03):
  • [29] Should I stay or should I go? Hormonal control of nest abandonment in a long-lived bird, the Adelie penguin
    Spee, Marion
    Beaulieu, Michael
    Dervaux, Antoine
    Chastel, Olivier
    Le Maho, Yvon
    Raclot, Thierry
    HORMONES AND BEHAVIOR, 2010, 58 (05) : 762 - 768
  • [30] Should I stay or should I go? Exit options within mixed systems of public and private health care finance
    Buckley, Neil
    Cuff, Katherine
    Hurley, Jeremiah
    Mestelman, Stuart
    Thomas, Stephanie
    Cameron, David
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC BEHAVIOR & ORGANIZATION, 2016, 131 : 62 - 77