Abstract

Collective behavior in the forest tent caterpillar (Malacosoma disstria) meets the thermal constraints of being an early spring folivore, but introduces other constraints in food choice. These are minimized by state-dependent, inter-individual, and ontogenetic variations in responses to social cues. Forest tent caterpillars use pheromone trails and tactile communication among colony members to stay together during foraging. At the group level, these rules lead to cohesive synchronized collective nomadic foraging, in which the colony travels en masse between feeding and resting sites. This paper proposes that synchronized collective locomotion prevents individuals from becoming separated from the colony and hence permits them to reap the advantages of group-living, notably collective basking to increase their body temperature above ambient and collective defense against natural enemies. However, this cohesive behavior also implies conservative foraging, and colonies can become trapped on poor food sources. High fidelity to pheromone trails leads to strong amplification of an initial choice, such that colonies seldom abandon the first food source contacted, even if a better one is nearby. The risk of this trapping is modulated both by consistent inter-individual variations in exploratory behavior and by inner state. Colonies consisting of active-phenotype or protein-deprived individuals that explore more-off trails exhibit greater collective flexibility in foraging. An ontogenetic shift toward more independent movement occurs as caterpillars grow. This leads to colony break-up as the season advances. Selection pressures facing older caterpillars favor solitary living more than in the earlier instars. Caterpillars respond to this predictably changing environment by altering their behavioral rules as they grow.

Highlights

  • Collective behavior in the forest tent caterpillar (Malacosoma disstria) meets the thermal constraints of being an early spring folivore, but introduces other constraints in food choice

  • We propose that thermoregulation is a key selection pressure that has shaped the collective behavior of an early spring feeding nomadic forager, the forest tent caterpillar, and that this leads to conservative foraging [i.e., low collective flexibility sensu Fitzgerald and Costa (1999)]

  • Collective nomadic foraging is common among caterpillars [one study shows 43% of described gregarious caterpillars exhibiting nomadic foraging (Costa and Pierce, 1997)], yet it has received far less attention than central-place foraging

Read more

Summary

Emma Despland*

Edited by: Audrey Dussutour, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, France. Reviewed by: Swidbert R. Collective behavior in the forest tent caterpillar (Malacosoma disstria) meets the thermal constraints of being an early spring folivore, but introduces other constraints in food choice These are minimized by state-dependent, inter-individual, and ontogenetic variations in responses to social cues. This paper proposes that synchronized collective locomotion prevents individuals from becoming separated from the colony and permits them to reap the advantages of group-living, notably collective basking to increase their body temperature above ambient and collective defense against natural enemies This cohesive behavior implies conservative foraging, and colonies can become trapped on poor food sources. High fidelity to pheromone trails leads to strong amplification of an initial choice, such that colonies seldom abandon the first food source contacted, even if a better one is nearby The risk of this trapping is modulated both by consistent inter-individual variations in exploratory behavior and by inner state.

EARLY SPRING CATERPILLARS AS SOCIAL ORGANISMS
EARLY SPRING FEEDING CATERPILLARS
ADVANTAGES OF COLLECTIVE BEHAVIOR IN THE FOREST TENT CATERPILLAR
COLLECTIVE THERMOREGULATION
ABIOTIC ENVIRONMENT MODULATES COLLECTIVE BEHAVIOR
INDIVIDUAL TRAITS MODULATE COLLECTIVE BEHAVIOR
ONTOGENETIC SHIFTS IN RESPONSES TO SOCIAL CUES
Findings
CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call