Mechanisms of Pavement Ant Aggression


Meeting Abstract

P3-191  Monday, Jan. 6  Mechanisms of Pavement Ant Aggression. GREENE, MJ*; RENNER, K; SWALLOW, JG; GREENE, Mic; University of Colorado Denver; University of South Dakota; University of Colorado Denver michael.greene@ucdenver.edu https://clas.ucdenver.edu/integrative-biology/michael-j-greene

Ant colonies are distributed systems that are regulated in a non-hierarchical manner. Without a central authority, individuals inform their behavioral decisions by comparing information in local cues to a set of inherent behavioral rules. Collectively, many individual behavioral decisions lead to changes in colony behavior including the decision to be aggressive with neighboring colonies. Pavement ants (Tetramorium immigrans ) form conspicuous wars with neighboring colonies in which thousands of ants participate. Wars last for many hours and few workers die in the process as because fighting is ritualized. A worker is likely to decide to fight if 1) it has had a recent history of interactions with nestmates and 2) detects a mismatch in nestmate recognition cues, coded in cuticular hydrocarbon profiles, on the cuticle of a non-nestmate ant. We present evidence showing how tactile and chemical cues and social context – isolation, nestmate interaction, or fighting non-nestmates – affect levels of the brain monoamines serotonin (5-HT), octopamine (OA), and dopamine (DA) and how serotenergic neurons are distributed in pavement ant brains.

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