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Journal Article

Citation

Boswell GP, Franks NR, Britton NF. Proc. Biol. Sci. 2001; 268(1477): 1723-1730.

Affiliation

Department of Mathematics, University of Dundee, Dundee DD1 4HN, UK. gboswell@maths.dundee.ac.uk

Copyright

(Copyright © 2001, Royal Society of London)

DOI

10.1098/rspb.2001.1671

PMID

11506686

PMCID

PMC1088800

Abstract

The causes of biological gigantism have received much attention, but only for individual organisms. What selection pressures might favour the evolution of gigantic societies? Here we consider the largest single-queen insect societies, those of the Old World army ant Dorylus, single colonies of which can have 20 million workers. We propose that colony gigantism in Dorylus arises as a result of an arms race and test this prediction by developing a size-structured mathematical model. We use this model for exploring and potentially explaining differences in colony size, colony aggression and colony propagation strategies in populations of New World army ants Eciton and Old World army ants Dorylus. The model shows that, by determining evolutionarily stable strategies (ESSs), differences in the trophic levels at which these army ants live feed forwards into differences in their densities and collision rates and, hence, into different strategies of growth, aggression and propagation. The model predicts large colony size and the occurrence of battles and a colony-propagation strategy involving highly asymmetrical divisions in Dorylus and that Eciton colonies should be smaller, non-combative and exhibit equitable binary fission. These ESSs are in excellent agreement with field observations and demonstrate that gargantuan societies can arise through arms races.


Language: en

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