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Garden sharing and garden stealing in fungus-growing ants

Authors :
Joanie Narozniak
Rachelle M. M. Adams
Abigail M. Green
Ulrich G. Mueller
Alisha K. Holloway
Source :
Die Naturwissenschaften. 87(11)
Publication Year :
2001

Abstract

Fungi cultivated by fungus-growing ants (Attini: Formicidae) are passed on between generations by transfer from maternal to offspring nest (vertical transmission within ant species). However, recent phylogenetic analyses revealed that cultivars are occasionally also transferred between attine species. The reasons for such lateral cultivar transfers are unknown. To investigate whether garden loss may induce ants to obtain a replacement cultivar from a neighboring colony (lateral cultivar transfer), pairs of queenright colonies of two Cyphomyrmex species were set up in two conjoined chambers; the garden of one colony was then removed to simulate the total crop loss that occurs naturally when pathogens devastate gardens. Garden-deprived colonies regained cultivars through one of three mechanisms: joining of a neighboring colony and cooperation in a common garden; stealing of a neighbor's garden; or aggressive usurpation of a neighbor's garden. Because pathogens frequently devastate attine gardens under natural conditions, garden joining, stealing and usurpation emerge as critical behavioral adaptations to survive garden catastrophes.

Details

ISSN :
00281042
Volume :
87
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Die Naturwissenschaften
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5795d0c33d15e9fd90537ecad5d54384