Data from: Does cooperation mean kinship between spatially discrete ant nests?

  • Duncan S. Procter (Contributor)
  • Joan E. Cottrell (Contributor)
  • Kevin Watts (Contributor)
  • Stuart W. A'Hara (Contributor)
  • Michael Hofreiter (Contributor)
  • Elva J. H. Robinson (Contributor)

Dataset

Description

Eusociality is one of the most complex forms of social organization, characterized by cooperative and reproductive units termed colonies. Altruistic behavior of workers within colonies is explained by inclusive fitness, with indirect fitness benefits accrued by helping kin. Members of a social insect colony are expected to be more closely related to one another than they are to other conspecifics. In many social insects, the colony can extend to multiple socially connected but spatially separate nests (polydomy). Social connections, such as trails between nests, promote cooperation and resource exchange, and we predict that workers from socially connected nests will have higher internest relatedness than those from socially unconnected, and noncooperating, nests. We measure social connections, resource exchange, and internest genetic relatedness in the polydomous wood ant Formica lugubris to test whether (1) socially connected but spatially separate nests cooperate, and (2) high internest relatedness is the underlying driver of this cooperation. Our results show that socially connected nests exhibit movement of workers and resources, which suggests they do cooperate, whereas unconnected nests do not. However, we find no difference in internest genetic relatedness between socially connected and unconnected nest pairs, both show high kinship. Our results suggest that neighboring pairs of connected nests show a social and cooperative distinction, but no genetic distinction. We hypothesize that the loss of a social connection may initiate ecological divergence within colonies. Genetic divergence between neighboring nests may build up only later, as a consequence rather than a cause of colony separation.,Worker movement dataFile containing ant worker movement data within sample triplets along with distance between nests and nest volumes. For full description of labelling see readmemovement_data.txtMicrosatellite dataData for microsatellite variation across 12 loci. Four columns preceeding mirosatellite data describing sampling (see readme), next 12 columns are variation across microsatellite datamicrosatellite_data.txtResource movement dataA four column file with data on the absorbance of individual ants following and ELISA assay. Arranges as follows: colony - the name of the tested triplet, n=10; nest - B, C or U for base, connected or unconnected (see paper Fig. 1 for details); sample - bl (blank, no ant), ctrl (control, known negative ant), 1-100 individual ants being tested for absorbance; absorb - absorbance valueabsorbance_data.txtSample locationsLocations of nests used within this study along with triplet ID and their distance to forest cover historicallysample_locations.txt,
Date made available14 Nov 2017
PublisherDryad

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