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Sex recognition does not modulate aggression toward nest intruders in a paper wasp

Authors :
André Rodrigues de Souza
Wilson Franca
Amanda Prato
Fábio Santos do Nascimento
Source :
Current Zoology.
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2022.

Abstract

During social interactions, the behavior of an individual often depends on the sex of its social partner. Many animal societies have males and females that play very different behavioral roles, although they coexist and interact non-sexually. At specific phases of the colony cycle, social wasp females and males are contemporaries within a nest, they often interact, although mating occurs mostly off the nest, therefore providing an opportunity to test sex discrimination in contexts other than classical sexual ones. We performed a lure presentation experiment to test if Mischocyttarus metathoracicus discriminate between conspecifics of the 2 sexes during on-nest social interactions. Female wasps discriminated conspecific sex during experimentally simulated nest intrusions. Visual and chemical cues may account for this sex discrimination. Despite sex discrimination (evidenced by differential inspective behavior from the nest females toward the female and the male lures), female wasps were as aggressive toward lures of both sexes. In the female-dominated hymenopteran societies, males are often subordinate and not aggressive on nest, resulting in females directing less aggression to them compared to other females. Instead, M. metathoracicus males and females are both aggressive toward nestmates, so they might be perceived as similar threat during on-nest social interactions.

Subjects

Subjects :
Animal Science and Zoology

Details

ISSN :
23969814 and 16745507
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Current Zoology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........3c0dd175348d0c55ad3bb9c45009092f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/cz/zoac051