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Latitudinal variation in behaviors linked to risk tolerance is driven by nest-site competition and spatial distribution in the ant Temnothorax rugatulus

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Abstract

Geographic range has long been noted to be associated with many organismic and ecological traits such as body size and species richness. However, much less is known about whether and how ecological variation across latitudinal gradients reflects behavioral variation. Ant colonies may also show behavioral variation, and Temnothorax rugatulus show a colony-level behavioral syndrome that seems to reflect risk tolerance across their North American range. While it is presumed that this pattern is the result of adaptation to local environmental conditions, which ecological factors are driving this variation are unknown. Here, we test if colony risk tolerance is affected by competition, predation, resource availability, or environmental stress at each site. Our results show that increased competition, specifically for nest sites, as well as increased spatial clustering of colonies predicts higher risk tolerance. Additionally, the spatial clustering of colonies influences the structure of the risk-taking syndrome, i.e., which colony-level behaviors are correlated and how strongly. This emphasizes the need for understanding large-scale geographic variation in behavior, as it may explain how ecological factors drive the evolution and maintenance of intraspecific behavioral variation across populations.

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Acknowledgments

We would like to thank the Dornhaus lab, Stephen Pratt and two anonymous reviewers for helpful feedback on the manuscript, Daniel Charbonneau for advice and feedback on the data analysis, Min Shin and Hoan Nguyen for their development of the optic flow algorithm, as well as NSF (grants no. IOS-1045239 and DBI-1262292 to AD).

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Correspondence to S. E. Bengston.

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Communicated by W. O. H. Hughes

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Supplemental Figure 1

All of the models tested in the stepwise model selection process and the associated AIC value of each model. The final model selected resulted in the percentage of nest sites occupied and the clustering index as the predictive variables with an AIC score of -146.9. (JPEG 60 kb)

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Bengston, S.E., Dornhaus, A. Latitudinal variation in behaviors linked to risk tolerance is driven by nest-site competition and spatial distribution in the ant Temnothorax rugatulus . Behav Ecol Sociobiol 69, 1265–1274 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00265-015-1939-4

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00265-015-1939-4

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