Title of article
Dufourʹs gland secretion as a repellent used during usurpation by the slave-maker ant Rossomyrmex minuchae
Author/Authors
Ruano، نويسنده , , Francisca and Hefetz، نويسنده , , Abraham and Lenoir، نويسنده , , Alain and Francke، نويسنده , , Wittko and Tinaut، نويسنده , , Alberto، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
7
From page
1158
To page
1164
Abstract
In slave-making ants, the invasion of the host colony by newly mated queens is a critical stage. We studied the strategy used by Rossomyrmex minuchae queens to invade their host Proformica longiseta. Field observations revealed that queens enter the host nest unchallenged by the host workers in the vicinity of the nest entrance. Pre-usurpation queens were found to possess a highly inflated Dufourʹs gland, which considerably reduces in size after successful usurpation. Chemical analysis of these queen glands revealed tetradecanal to be the major product in pre-usurpation Rossomyrmex queens, but to be almost absent in queens that have been adopted by P. longiseta. We consequently hypothesized that tetradecanal is a repellent that is used by queens to prevent host worker aggression. We tested its repellent effect by attempting to deter starved, highly motivated workers from a droplet of honey. Tetradecanal indeed proved to be highly repellent both to host worker P. longiseta and non-host worker Formica selysi. It was even more powerful than limonene, a reported general ant repellent. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that R. minuchae queens use Dufourʹs gland secretion as a weapon during nest usurpation. The general use of tetradecanal as a defensive compound, and its seemingly non-specific repellent effect on ants, indicate that it may act as a general ant repellent. Its adoption by R. minuchae queens thus provides them with an efficient defensive and offensive chemical weapon during their long and risky search for new host nests.
Keywords
Aldehydes , repellent , Social parasites , Insect , Dufourיs gland
Journal title
Journal of Insect Physiology
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Journal of Insect Physiology
Record number
1413953
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