'Godmother' ant uses Mob tactics to rub out rivalsSeptember 02, 2002Researchers at the University of Sheffield and the University of Keele have discovered that Dinoponera quadriceps ants, known as Dinosaur ants, and the Mafia have something in common. Both have dominant leaders who give rivals a "kiss of death", as a signal for their 'mob' to punish the offender. The alpha female in a colony of Dinosaur ants marks rival females with a chemical which signals lower ranking ants in the colony to punish the "pretender". This secures the alpha female's position as the only breeding female within the colony. Dinosaur ants, from Brazil, are the world's largest ant, at about 3 to 4cm long. They live in small colonies, with only one breeding female. This female is the 'mother ant' and all the other ants in the colony are normally her daughters. Male ants play no active role in colony life. Dinosaur ants are different from most other ant species in that the alpha ant is not a queen, but a mated worker. This means that any female can potentially become the alpha ant, leading to increased rivalry within the colony compared to normal ants. Francis Ratnieks, Professor of Apiculture at the University of Sheffield and one of the authors of the study says, "If the mother ant has her position threatened by another female (usually the next highest ranking ant, known as the beta female) she will wipe her sting against the pretender, leaving behind a distinctive chemical mixture. On detecting the scent, lower ranking females will punish the beta female. This punishment (known as immobilization) leads to the beta female losing her high rank and any chance of replacing the alpha in the future. Sometimes the punishment kills the rival." Thibaud Monnin, formerly of Sheffield University and now at the Université Pierre et Marie Curie in Paris, stresses that low ranking females have a lot of power. "They cannot reproduce but, depending on their best interest, they can either allow the pretender to take over the alpha position. They prevent replacement when alpha is young and fertile, and favour replacement when alpha is getting old, so low ranking females choose the breeder of the colony." Professor Ratnieks says, "This study shows that ants can have similarities to humans in that both police their societies in order to prevent undesirable behaviour." | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Related Dinosaur Current Events and Dinosaur News Articles Paleontologists doubt 'dinosaur dance floor' A group of paleontologists visited the northern Arizona wilderness site nicknamed a "dinosaur dance floor" and concluded there were no dinosaur tracks there, only a dense collection of unusual potholes eroded in the sandstone. Study of polar dinosaur migration questions whether dinosaurs were truly the first great migrators Contrary to popular belief, polar dinosaurs may not have traveled nearly as far as originally thought when making their bi-annual migration. Brain structure provides key to unraveling function of bizarre dinosaur crests Paleontologists have long debated the function of the strange, bony crests on the heads of the duck-billed dinosaurs known as lambeosaurs. The structures contain incredibly long, convoluted nasal passages that loop up over the tops of their skulls. Gene expression in alligators suggests birds have 'thumbs' The latest breakthrough in a 120 year-old debate on the evolution of the bird wing was published in the open-access journal PLoS ONE. Canada's shores saved animals from devastating climate change The shorelines of ancient Alberta, British Columbia and the Canadian Arctic were an important refuge for some of the world's earliest animals, most of which were wiped out by a mysterious global extinction event some 252 million years ago. Meat-eating dinosaur from Argentina had bird-like breathing system The remains of a 30-foot-long predatory dinosaur discovered along the banks of Argentina's Rio Colorado is helping to unravel how birds evolved their unusual breathing system. America's smallest dinosaur uncovered An unusual breed of dinosaur that was the size of a chicken, ran on two legs and scoured the ancient forest floor for termites is the smallest dinosaur species found in North America, according to a University of Calgary researcher who analyzed bones found during the excavation of an ancient bone bed near Red Deer, Alberta. My, what big teeth you had! Extinct species had large teeth on roof of mouth When the world's land was congealed in one supercontinent 240 million years ago, Antarctica wasn't the forbiddingly icy place it is now. But paleontologists have found a previously unknown amphibious predator species that probably still made it less than hospitable. Ancient mother spawns new insight on reptile reproduction A 75-million-year-old fossil of a pregnant turtle and a nest of fossilized eggs that were discovered in the badlands of southeastern Alberta by scientists and staff from the University of Calgary and the Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology are yielding new ideas on the evolution of egg-laying and reproduction in turtles and tortoises. Duck-billed dinosaurs outgrew predators to survive With long limbs and a soft body, the duck-billed hadrosaur had few defenses against predators such as tyrannosaurs. But new research on the bones of this plant-eating dinosaur suggests that it had at least one advantage: It grew to adulthood much faster than its predators, giving it superiority in size. More Dinosaur Current Events and Dinosaur News Articles |
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