Natures wonders: two ant species live together (Introduction)

by David Turell @, Monday, February 20, 2017, 00:11 (2584 days ago) @ David Turell

One type is large and apparently rather placid. The tiny ones are like pit bulls to any invader:

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2121545-ant-odd-couple-work-together-to-build-and-...

"One is a massive black ant, the other is a tiny, only distantly related, brown ant. But together they form a perfect team to build and guard a shared nest.

"This insect odd couple is found in the forests of the Lamto Ecological Reserve in Ivory Coast. The 15-millimetre-long Platythyrea conradti is a highly skilled engineer, building nests from the organic material – like leaf mulch – it finds in its environment. Small species then move into the organic matter – providing the large ants with a ready meal.

"One species the large ant doesn’t eat is the 2.5-millimetre-long Strumigenys maynei. This small ant moves into the nests, where its highly aggressive nature helps deter any unwanted invaders.

“'This is a remarkable and rare example of cooperation between two ant species that share little in common,” says Thomas Parmentier, an evolutionary biologist from the Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium. “One is large and the other minuscule, they belong to unrelated genera and have markedly different behaviour.”

Together, though, they can maintain a safe and efficient home, he says.

***

"Parasitic species often sneak into nests by producing odours that match those of their host. But the team’s results show that, in this case, both species produce unique odour cues as they move around the nest. Despite this, the species are almost never aggressive to one another.

“'It was astonishing that both ant species tolerate each other’s presence in spite of clearly distinct nest-mate recognition cues,” says Parmentier. But he says the biggest surprise was how the ants behaved towards intruders.

“'The large Platythyrea ant was very shy and avoided direct confrontations with smaller enemies. The Strumigenys ants were, in contrast, small pitbulls which attacked and deterred enemies very efficiently,” he says.

***

"these two ants seem to form a truly mutually beneficial relationship, called parabiosis, because the two species share a common home and both gain.

"It is still unclear why they might cooperate, says Parmentier. Perhaps the larger ants lack a defence worker caste and the smaller ants took on the job and in return can benefit from the small prey thriving in the nest constructed by Platythyrea."

Comment: This relationship is easy to understand. The personality of each colony compliment each other.


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