Tyler Wong’s research while affiliated with Arizona State University and other places

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Publications (1)


Metrics of colony growth and survival during the first ten months post-founding in colonies initiated by one, two, or four queens, including: (A) Colony size (worker number), (B) per-queen worker production estimated as the mean worker number divided by the number of queens, (C) survival probability of individual queens, and (D) survival probability of colonies, where colony survival is defined as the survival of at least one queen. Points and bars represent means and standard errors, and the dashed vertical line marks the week in which the majority of colonies experienced first-worker emergence.
The Shannon Index measuring task performance diversity (Htasks) for queens (top) and workers (bottom) for all colonies as a function of number of workers. Queen task performance diversity decreased as worker number increased (LMM, P < 0.001, slope = − 0.003, R² = 0.116), whereas worker task performance increased with worker number (LMM, P < 0.001, slope = 0.076, R² = 0.356). Each point represents a single day of scan sampling for a single colony.
Behaviors of queens (left) and workers (right) represented as the mean proportion of total scan sampling periods in which a given behavior was observed, as a function of colony worker number. As worker number increased, queens spent significantly less time idle and foraging, while workers spent less time on brood care and more time on foraging and walking (GLMM, P < 0.001 for all behaviors described here).
Cooperation among unrelated ant queens provides persistent growth and survival benefits during colony ontogeny
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April 2021

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11 Citations

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Tyler Wong

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The fitness consequences of cooperation can vary across an organism’s lifespan. For non-kin groups, especially, social advantages must balance intrinsic costs of cooperating with non-relatives. In this study, we asked how challenging life history stages can promote stable, long-term alliances among unrelated ant queens. We reared single- and multi-queen colonies of the primary polygynous harvester ant, Pogonomyrmex californicus, from founding through the first ten months of colony growth, when groups face high mortality risks. We found that colonies founded by multiple, unrelated queens experienced significant survival and growth advantages that outlasted the colony founding period. Multi-queen colonies experienced lower mortality than single-queen colonies, and queens in groups experienced lower mortality than solitary queens. Further, multi-queen colonies produced workers at a faster rate than did single-queen colonies, even while experiencing lower per-queen worker production costs. Additionally, we characterized ontogenetic changes in the organization of labor, and observed increasing and decreasing task performance diversity by workers and queens, respectively, as colonies grew. This dynamic task allocation likely reflects a response to the changing role of queens as they are increasingly able to delegate risky and costly tasks to an expanding workforce. Faster worker production in multi-queen colonies may beneficially accelerate this behavioral transition from a vulnerable parent–offspring group to a stable, growing colony. These combined benefits of cooperation may facilitate the retention of multiple unrelated queens in mature colonies despite direct fitness costs, providing insight into the evolutionary drivers of stable associations between unrelated individuals.

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Citations (1)


... It remains unclear how the two effects-lower brood metabolic rate and increased worker brood-tending behaviour due to the presence of brood-interact to quantitatively affect colony metabolic rate when the amount of brood in the colony varies. In harvester ant colonies, the relative allocation of workers to the task of brood care tends to decline as colonies grow beyond early stages of development [28,29], reflecting a potential pattern in social insect colonies of more intense focus on brood production at smaller sizes [30]. Similarly, larger Temnothorax rugatulus ant colonies have lower brood : worker ratios [7], and in Florida harvester ants (Picipes badius) colonies, the colony-level brood : worker ratio declined from an average of 1.4 in incipient colonies to 0.33 in colonies of 6000 workers [31]. ...

Reference:

Ontogeny of energy use in harvester ant colonies, and the metabolic expense of colony growth
Cooperation among unrelated ant queens provides persistent growth and survival benefits during colony ontogeny