4.5 Article

Effect of queen number on colony-level nutrient regulation, food collection and performance in two polygynous ant species

Journal

JOURNAL OF INSECT PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 138, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jinsphys.2022.104365

Keywords

Ants; Collective behavior; Foraging behavior; Nutrition; Polygyny

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There is growing recognition of the impact of social interactions on animal foraging behavior, and ants provide a unique opportunity to study this phenomenon. However, little is known about the influence of queen number on colony-level foraging behavior and performance in polygynous ant species. This study explored the direct effects of queen number on protein-carbohydrate regulation, food collection, survival, and brood production in two polygynous ant species, and found that queen number had significant impact on these factors. The results highlight the importance of queen presence in shaping colony-level foraging and performance, with interspecific variation being influenced by differences in life history traits.
ABS T R A C T There is growing appreciation for how social interactions influence animal foraging behavior, especially with respect to key nutrients. Ants, given their eusocial nature and ability to be reared and manipulated in the lab-oratory, offer unique opportunities to explore how social interactions influence nutrient regulation and related processes. At the colony-level, ants simultaneously regulate their protein and carbohydrate intake; a regulation tied to the presence of larvae. However, even though 45% of the approximately 10,000 ant species are polyg-ynous, we know little about the influence of queen number on colony-level foraging behavior and performance. Here we explored the direct effects of queen number on colony-level protein-carbohydrate regulation, food collection, survival, and brood production in two polygynous ant species (Nylanderia fulva and Solenopsis invicta). For both species we conducted choice and no-choice experiments using small experimental colonoids (20 workers) with 0, 1, or 2 queens. Both species regulated their relative intake of protein and carbohydrate around a P1:C2 mark. However, only N. fulva responded to the addition of queens, increasing overall food collection, biasing intake towards carbohydrates, and over-collecting imbalanced foods. N. fulva also exhibited reduced survival and reproduction on protein-biased foods. In contrast, S. invicta showed no response to queen number and reduced food collection on the protein-biased diet while maintaining high survival and reproduction. Our results demonstrate the potential for queens of some ant species to impact colony-level foraging and perfor-mance, with interspecific variation likely being shaped by differences in life history traits.

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