Title of article :
WITHIN-COLONY RELATEDNESS IN A TERMITE SPECIES: GENETIC ROADS TO EVSOCIALITY?
Author/Authors :
HUSSENEDER، C. نويسنده , , BRANDL، R. نويسنده , , EPPLEN، C. نويسنده , , EPPLEN، J.T. نويسنده , , KAIB، M. نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Pages :
-1044
From page :
1045
To page :
0
Abstract :
We staged eight types of contests using adult male conviet cichlids (Cichlasoma nigrofasciatum) to study the effects of dear enemy recognition on the defensive decisions of territorial residents when confronted by two opponents. Our observations supported the hypothesis that residents faced with two intruders simultaneously would divide the overall response shown to a single intruder between the two intruders with respect to their relative threats (i.e. sizes). Consequently, in comparison to a single-intruder circumstance, the residentsʹ attacks against any given intruder were reduced. The relative threat of competitors was dramatically altered when one of the residentsʹ opponents was a dear enemy neighbour. When faced with a dear enemy neighbour and an unfamiliar intruder simultaneously, residents preferentially confronted the unfamiliar opponent. That is, the establishment of dear enemy recognition between a resident and a neighbour allowed the resident to direct his aggression to the greater competitive threat, i.e. the intruder. In this case. the amount of aggression residents exhibited toward the intruder was similar to the amount of aggression against a single nonterritorial intruder. Therefore, having a dear enemy neighbour freed a resident to defend its territory against an intruder with similar efficiency compared to when the intruder had been the residentʹs only opponent.
Keywords :
relatedness asymmetry , replacement reproductives , Schedorhinotermes lamanianus , Isoptera , Bartzs hypothesis.
Journal title :
BEHAVIOUR (LEIDEN)
Serial Year :
1999
Journal title :
BEHAVIOUR (LEIDEN)
Record number :
21351
Link To Document :
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