DOI: https://doi.org/10.25849/myrmecol.news_032:001

Open Access: CC BY 4.0

Author:

Helanterä, H.




Year: 2022

Title:

Supercolonies of ants (Hymenoptera: Formicidae): ecological patterns, behavioural processes and their implications for social evolution



Journal: Myrmecological News

Volume: 31

Pages: 1-22

Type of contribution: Review Article

Supplementary material: No

Abstract:

Supercolonies of ants are perhaps the largest non-human animal societies, at their largest spanning several millions of individuals and thousands of nests and in invasive species even crossing oceans. Supercolonies have convergently evolved in several ant groups, and they all share a syndrome of key features. First, their colonies spread by budding, which leads to extensive polydomy and inter-nest movement of individuals. Second, local mating and recruitment of queens lead to extensive polygyny. Their ecological dominance is clear, but their evolutionary maintenance is enigmatic due to low relatedness among cooperating individuals and the lack of clear functional organization above local polydomous units. This review takes a multi-level look at the social evolution of supercolonies in an inclusive fitness perspective, outlining key behavioural, ecological, and genetic processes as well as open questions. Such consideration of cooperation and competition from the gene level to the level of populations of supercolonies is necessary for understanding the history and future of supercolonies.

Open access, licensed under CC BY 4.0. © 2022 The Author(s).



Key words: Ants, Formicidae, supercolony, unicolonial, polygyny, polydomy, kin selection, inclusive fitness, invasive species, review.

Publisher: The Austrian Society of Entomofaunistics

ISSN: 1997-3500

Check out the accompanying blog contribution: https://blog.myrmecologicalnews.org/2022/01/13/a-multi-level-look-at-the-social-evolution-of-ant-supercolonies/