Recognition of relatives is often crucial for adaptive social behavior, but availability of recognition cues may limit adaptation. Social insect workers direct altruism toward relatives through nest mate recognition. We studied whether genetic diversity increases nest mate recognition cue diversity and weakens nest mate recognition behavior in the ant Formica fusca that has both multiple and single queen societies in sympatric populations. Despite larger genetic diversity in multiple queen than single queen colonies, we found no differences in chemical recognition cue diversity or aggression toward non-nest mates in behavioral bioassays. The results suggest that the relationship between individual genotypes and the colony chemical phenotype...
Eusocial insects vary significantly in colony queen number and mating frequency, resulting in a wide...
Genetic diversity can benefit social insects by providing variability in immune defences against par...
Animals such as social insects that live in colonies can recognize intruders from other colonies of ...
The ability to distinguish nestmates from foreign individuals is central to the functioning of insec...
High relatedness promotes the evolution of sociality because potentially costly cooperative behaviou...
Introduction Social insects live in colonies and with few exceptions they resist mixing with other ...
High relatedness promotes the evolution of sociality because potentially costly cooperative behaviou...
Key social traits, like queen number in eusocial insect colonies, have long been considered plastic,...
The evolutionary stability of social cooperation requires altruistic acts to be directed mainly towa...
Collective behavior is widespread in nature and examples include schools of fish and nest building i...
Collective behavior is widespread in nature and examples include schools of fish and nest building i...
Collective behavior is widespread in nature and examples include schools of fish and nest building i...
Discriminating between group members and strangers is a key feature of social life. Nestmate recogni...
Abstract The evolution of sociality is often associated with close relatedness and genetic similarit...
Animals such as social insects that live in colonies can recognize intruders from other colonies of ...
Eusocial insects vary significantly in colony queen number and mating frequency, resulting in a wide...
Genetic diversity can benefit social insects by providing variability in immune defences against par...
Animals such as social insects that live in colonies can recognize intruders from other colonies of ...
The ability to distinguish nestmates from foreign individuals is central to the functioning of insec...
High relatedness promotes the evolution of sociality because potentially costly cooperative behaviou...
Introduction Social insects live in colonies and with few exceptions they resist mixing with other ...
High relatedness promotes the evolution of sociality because potentially costly cooperative behaviou...
Key social traits, like queen number in eusocial insect colonies, have long been considered plastic,...
The evolutionary stability of social cooperation requires altruistic acts to be directed mainly towa...
Collective behavior is widespread in nature and examples include schools of fish and nest building i...
Collective behavior is widespread in nature and examples include schools of fish and nest building i...
Collective behavior is widespread in nature and examples include schools of fish and nest building i...
Discriminating between group members and strangers is a key feature of social life. Nestmate recogni...
Abstract The evolution of sociality is often associated with close relatedness and genetic similarit...
Animals such as social insects that live in colonies can recognize intruders from other colonies of ...
Eusocial insects vary significantly in colony queen number and mating frequency, resulting in a wide...
Genetic diversity can benefit social insects by providing variability in immune defences against par...
Animals such as social insects that live in colonies can recognize intruders from other colonies of ...