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Behavioural variation and plasticity along an invasive ant introduction pathway

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posted on 2021-11-02, 20:32 authored by A Felden, CI Paris, DG Chapple, John HaywoodJohn Haywood, AV Suarez, ND Tsutsui, Philip LesterPhilip Lester, MAM Gruber
Once established in new areas, introduced species may exhibit changes in their biology due to phenotypic plasticity, novel selection pressures and genetic drift. Moreover, the introduction process itself has been hypothesised to act as a selective filter for traits that promote invasiveness. We tested the hypothesis that behaviours thought to promote invasiveness—such as increased foraging activity and aggression—are selected for during invasion by comparing traits among native and introduced populations of the widespread Argentine ant (Linepithema humile). We studied Argentine ant populations in the native range in Argentina and in three invaded regions along an introduction pathway: California, Australia and New Zealand. In each region, we set up 32 experimental colonies to measure foraging activity and interspecific aggression in a subset of the study regions. These colonies were subject to experimental manipulation of carbohydrate availability and octopamine, a biogenic amine known to modulate behaviour in insects, to measure variation in behavioural plasticity. We found variation in foraging activity among populations, but this variation was not consistent with selection on behaviour in relation to the invasion process. We found that colonies with limited access to carbohydrates exhibited unchanged exploratory behaviour, but higher exploitation activity and lower aggression. Colonies given octopamine consistently increased foraging behaviour (both exploration and exploitation), as well as aggression when also sugar-deprived. There was no difference in the degree of behavioural response to our experimental treatments along the introduction pathway. We did not find support for selection of behavioural traits associated with invasiveness along the Argentine ant's introduction pathway or clear evidence for an association between the introduction process and variation in behavioural plasticity. These results indicate that mechanisms promote behavioural variation in a similar fashion both in native and introduced ranges. Our results challenge the assumption that introduced populations always perform better in key behavioural traits hypothesised to be associated with invasion success.

Funding

Making a rod for our own backs: do human actions select for traits that promote invasiveness in animals?

Royal Society of New Zealand

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History

Preferred citation

Felden, A., Paris, C. I., Chapple, D. G., Haywood, J., Suarez, A. V., Tsutsui, N. D., Lester, P. J. & Gruber, M. A. M. (2018). Behavioural variation and plasticity along an invasive ant introduction pathway. Journal of Animal Ecology, 87(6), 1653-1666. https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2656.12886

Journal title

Journal of Animal Ecology

Volume

87

Issue

6

Publication date

2018-11-01

Pagination

1653-1666

Publisher

Wiley

Publication status

Published

Online publication date

2018-08-13

ISSN

0021-8790

eISSN

1365-2656

Language

en