TY - JOUR
T1 - Life-history strategy and behavioral type
T2 - risk-tolerance reflects growth rate and energy allocation in ant colonies
AU - Bengston, Sarah E.
AU - Shin, Min
AU - Dornhaus, Anna
N1 - Funding Information: We would like to thank Hoan Nguyen for the collaboration with the optical flow algorithm, the Rabeling lab, Dornhaus lab members and Julia Saltz for helpful feedback. Chantal Binder, Hunter Guerin and Kevin Harrington were invaluable for their assistance in the field and lab. Funding – We thank the NSF for funding (grants no. IOS-1045239, IOS-0841756 and DEB-1262292). Publisher Copyright: © 2016 The Authors
PY - 2017/4/1
Y1 - 2017/4/1
N2 - Despite the recent interest in animal personality and behavioral syndromes, there is a paucity of explanations for why distinct behavioral traits should evolve to correlate. We investigate whether such correlations across apparently distinct behavioral traits may be explained by variation in life history strategy among individual ant colonies. Life history theory predicts that the way in which individuals allocate energy towards somatic maintenance or reproduction drives several distinct traits in physiology, morphology, and energy use; it also predicts that an individual's willingness to engage in risky behaviors should depend on reproductive strategy. We use Temnothorax ants, which have been shown to exhibit ‘personalities’ and a syndrome that may reflect risk tolerance at the colony level. We measure colonies' relative investment in growth rate (new workers produced) compared to reproductive effort (males and queens produced). Comparing sterile worker production to reproductive alate production provides a direct measure of how colonies are investing their energy, analogous to investment in growth versus reproduction in a unitary organism. Consistently with this idea, we found that behavioral type of ant colonies was associated with their life history strategy: risk-tolerant colonies grew faster and invested more in reproduction, whereas risk-averse colonies had lower growth rate but invested relatively more in workers. This provides evidence that behavioral syndromes can be a consequence of life-history strategy variation, linking the two fields and supporting the use of an integrative approach.
AB - Despite the recent interest in animal personality and behavioral syndromes, there is a paucity of explanations for why distinct behavioral traits should evolve to correlate. We investigate whether such correlations across apparently distinct behavioral traits may be explained by variation in life history strategy among individual ant colonies. Life history theory predicts that the way in which individuals allocate energy towards somatic maintenance or reproduction drives several distinct traits in physiology, morphology, and energy use; it also predicts that an individual's willingness to engage in risky behaviors should depend on reproductive strategy. We use Temnothorax ants, which have been shown to exhibit ‘personalities’ and a syndrome that may reflect risk tolerance at the colony level. We measure colonies' relative investment in growth rate (new workers produced) compared to reproductive effort (males and queens produced). Comparing sterile worker production to reproductive alate production provides a direct measure of how colonies are investing their energy, analogous to investment in growth versus reproduction in a unitary organism. Consistently with this idea, we found that behavioral type of ant colonies was associated with their life history strategy: risk-tolerant colonies grew faster and invested more in reproduction, whereas risk-averse colonies had lower growth rate but invested relatively more in workers. This provides evidence that behavioral syndromes can be a consequence of life-history strategy variation, linking the two fields and supporting the use of an integrative approach.
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U2 - https://doi.org/10.1111/oik.03527
DO - https://doi.org/10.1111/oik.03527
M3 - Article
SN - 0030-1299
VL - 126
SP - 556
EP - 564
JO - Oikos
JF - Oikos
IS - 4
ER -