The scent of supercolonies: the discovery, synthesis and behavioural verification of ant colony recognition cues
BMC Biology 2009, 7:71
Miriam Brandt, Ellen van Wilgenburg, Robert Sulc, Kenneth J Shea and Neil D Tsutsui (wisdom grantee)
Background
Ants form highly social and cooperative colonies that compete, and
often fight, against other such colonies, both intra- and
interspecifically. Some invasive ants take sociality to an extreme,
forming geographically massive 'supercolonies' across thousands of
kilometres. The success of social insects generally, as well as
invasive ants in particular, stems from the sophisticated mechanisms
used to accurately and precisely distinguish colonymates from
non-colonymates. Surprisingly, however, the specific chemicals used for
this recognition are virtually undescribed.
Results
Here, we report the discovery, chemical synthesis and behavioural
testing of the colonymate recognition cues used by the widespread and
invasive Argentine ant (Linepithema humile). By synthesizing pure
versions of these chemicals in the laboratory and testing them in
behavioural assays, we show that these compounds trigger aggression
among normally amicable nestmates, but control hydrocarbons do not.
Furthermore, behavioural testing across multiple different
supercolonies reveals that the reaction to individual compounds varies
from colony to colony -- the expected reaction to true colony
recognition labels. Our results also show that both quantitative and
qualitative changes to cuticular hydrocarbon profiles can trigger
aggression among nestmates. The data point the way for the development
of new, environmentally-friendly, control strategies based on the
species-specific manipulation of aggressive behaviour.
Conclusions
Overall, our findings reveal the identity of specific chemicals used
for colonymate recognition by the invasive Argentine ants. Although the
particular chemicals used by other ants may differ, the patterns
reported here are likely to be true for ants generally. As almost all
invasive ants display widespread unicoloniality in their introduced
ranges, our findings are particularly relevant for our understanding of
the biology of these damaging invaders.
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