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Nestmate recognition in social insects: overcoming physiological constraints with collective decision making

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TLDR
This work uses agent-based modeling to show that strong nestmate recognition by individuals is often unnecessary, and shows that nestmate Recognition has a stronger task allocation component than previously thought, as colonies can nearly always achieve perfect nestmates if it is cost effective for them to do so at the colony level.
Abstract
Social insects rank among the most abundant and influential terrestrial organisms. The key to their success is their ability to form tightly knit social groups that perform work cooperatively, and effectively exclude non-members from the colony. An extensive body of research, both empirical and theoretical, has explored how optimal acceptance thresholds could evolve in individuals, driven by the twin costs of inappropriately rejecting true nestmates and erroneously accepting individuals from foreign colonies. Here, in contrast, we use agent-based modeling to show that strong nestmate recognition by individuals is often unnecessary. Instead, highly effective nestmate recognition can arise as a colony-level property from a collective of individually poor recognizers. Essentially, although an intruder can get by one defender when their odor cues are similar, it is nearly impossible to get past many defenders if there is the slightest difference in cues. The results of our models match observed rejection rates in studies of ants, wasps, and bees. We also show that previous research in support of the optimal threshold theory approach to the problem of nestmate recognition can be alternatively viewed as evidence in favor of the collective formation of a selectively permeable barrier that allows in nestmates (at a significant cost) while rejecting non-nestmates. Finally, this work shows that nestmate recognition has a stronger task allocation component than previously thought, as colonies can nearly always achieve perfect nestmate recognition if it is cost effective for them to do so at the colony level.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Ecology and Evolution of Communication in Social Insects

TL;DR: In this article, the authors summarize the knowledge on prominent messages in social insects that inform about reproduction, group membership, resource locations, and threats and discuss potential evolutionary trajectories of each message in the context of social complexity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cuckoos versus hosts in insects and birds: adaptations, counter‐adaptations and outcomes

TL;DR: An adaptive explanation of co‐evolution between brood parasites and their hosts is proposed, which centres on the relative strength of two opposing processes: strategy‐facilitation, in which one line of host defence promotes the evolution of another form of resistance, and strategy‐blocking, which may relax selection on another so completely that it causes it to decay.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conspecific Ant Aggression is Correlated with Chemical Distance, but not with Genetic or Spatial Distance

TL;DR: Aggression was a nonlinear step function of Z9-alkene chemical distance, where a small change in chemical profile resulted in a rapid behavioural transition from non-aggression to overt aggression.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distributed nestmate recognition in ants.

TL;DR: A distributed system allows a colony to identify non-nestmates without requiring that all individuals have the same complete information and helps to facilitate the tracking of changes in cuticular hydrocarbon profiles, because only a subset of ants must respond to provide an adequate response.
Journal ArticleDOI

Context affects nestmate recognition errors in honey bees and stingless bees

TL;DR: Comparing the recognition decisions of discriminators in two eusocial bees under different contexts demonstrates that context is a significant factor in a discriminators' ability to make appropriate recognition decisions, and should be considered when designing recognition study methodologies.
References
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Book

The Biology of the Honey Bee

TL;DR: This book describes the life cycle of a honey bee, focusing on the courtship and mating activities of Worker Bees and their role in the evolution of monogamy.
Book

Social evolution in ants

TL;DR: An overview of the current state of scientific knowledge about social evolution in ants is presented and how studies on ants have contributed to an understanding of many fundamental topics in behavioural ecology and evolutionary biology is shown.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ecological, behavioral, and biochemical aspects of insect hydrocarbons*

TL;DR: This review covers selected literature from 1982 to the present on some of the ecological, behavioral, and biochemical aspects of hydrocarbon use by insects and other arthropods.

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