An absence of aggression between non-nestmates in the bull ant Myrmecia nigriceps.

Ellen van Wilgenburg, Susie Dang, Amy-Louise Forti, Tessa J Koumoundouros, Anna Ly, Mark A Elgar
Author Information
  1. Ellen van Wilgenburg: Department of Zoology, The University of Melbourne, Victoria, 3010, Australia. ellenvw@gmail.com

Abstract

The ability of social insects to discriminate against non-nestmates is vital for maintaining colony integrity, and in most social insect species, individuals act aggressively towards non-nestmates that intrude into their nest. Our experimental field data revealed that intra-colony aggression in the primitive bulldog ant Myrmecia nigriceps is negligible; our series of bioassays revealed no significant difference in the occurrence of aggression in trials involving workers from the same, a close (less than 300 m) or a far (more than 1.5 km) nest. Further, non-nestmate intruders were able to enter the nest in 60% of our trials; a similar level was observed in trials involving nestmates. These results suggest that workers of M. nigriceps are either unable to recognize alien conspecifics or that the costs of ignoring workers from foreign colonies are sufficiently low to favor low levels of inter-colony aggression in this species.

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MeSH Term

Aggression
Animals
Ants
Behavior, Animal
Female
Nesting Behavior
Recognition, Psychology
Social Behavior
Species Specificity

Word Cloud

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