4.7 Article

Influence of the Number of Queens on Nest Establishment: Native and Invasive Ant Species

Journal

ANIMALS
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ani11030591

Keywords

invasive; ant; native; establishment; queens; workers; Linepithema humile; Tapinoma nigerrimum

Funding

  1. Marie Curie Intra European Fellowship - FP7 of the European Commission [237862]
  2. CNRS
  3. French National Research Agency/BiodivERsA: Alien Scenarios project [BMBF/PT DLR 01LC1807C]
  4. AXA Research Fund Chair of Invasion Biology of University Paris Saclay

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Nest establishment is a crucial stage in the ant life cycle, with the number of queens influencing both queen and worker behavior during and after this process. The study found that having six queens resulted in faster entry of queens into the nest, more workers inside the nest during establishment, and fewer workers engaged in nest tasks after establishment. Differences in response were observed between invasive Argentine ants and native Mediterranean ants.
Simple Summary Nest establishment is a critical stage of the ant life cycle because it determines the chances of colony success. Here, we study the effect of different numbers of queens (i.e., one or six) on the position of queens and workers inside and outside the artificial nests of an invasive (Linepithema humile) and Mediterranean native (Tapinoma nigerrimum) species. Our results suggest that queens in nests with six queens entered the nest faster than single queens. Similarly, during nest establishment, workers in nests with six queens entered the nest faster, with this effect being more pronounced for the native species. Once nests were established, fewer workers were engaged in outside-nest tasks in nests with six queens. This was especially true for workers of the native species engaged in patrolling. These results suggest that the number of queens can influence both queen and worker behavior, and that invasive and native species have different responses. As a critical stage in the life cycle of ant colonies, nest establishment depends on external and internal factors. This study investigates the effect of the number of queens on queen and worker behavior during nest establishment in invasive Argentine ants (Linepitema humile) and native Mediterranean Tapinoma nigerrimum. We set up experimental colonies with the same number of workers but with one or six queens. At different time points, we recorded the positions of queens and workers inside and outside the nest. Our results highlight the influence of the number of queens on the position of queens and workers with between-species differences. Queens of both species entered the nests more quickly when there were six queens. During nest establishment, more workers were inside nests with six queens for both species, with this effect being greater for T. nigerrimum. Once nests were established, fewer workers of both species were engaged in nest maintenance and feeding in nests with six queens; T. nigerrimum had fewer workers engaged in patrolling. These results suggest that the number of queens is a key factor driving queen and worker behavior during and after nest establishment with different species responses.

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