Abstract

Asian weaver ants (Oecophylla smaragdina) are arboreal ants that are known to form mutualistic complexes with their host trees. They are eusocial ants that build elaborate nests in the canopy in tropical areas. A colony comprises of multiple nests, usually on multiple trees, and the boundaries of the colony may be difficult to identify. However, they provide the ideal model for studying group living in invertebrates since there are a definite number of nests for a given substrate, the tree. Here, we briefly examine the structure of the nests and the processes involved in the construction and maintenance of these nests. We have described the spatial arrangement of weaver ant nests on trees in two distinct tropical clusters, a few hundred kilometres apart in India. Measurements were made for 13 trees with a total of 71 nests in the two field sites. We have considered a host of biotic and abiotic factors that may be crucial in determining the location of the nesting site by Asian weaver ants. Our results indicate that tree characteristics and architecture followed by leaf features help determine nest location in Asian weaver ants. While environmental factors may not be as influential to nest arrangement, they seem to be important determinants of nest structure. The parameters that may be considered in establishing the nests could be crucial in picking the evolutionary drivers for colonial living in social organisms.

Highlights

  • Weaver ants are eusocial insects, belonging to the family Formicidae and order Hymenoptera, that have a unique nest-building behavior

  • Nest surveys were conducted at various locations inside the University of Agricultural Sciences (UAS) campus in the city of Bangalore as well as the Indian Institute of Technology Madras (IITM) (12°59029”N, 80°1401”E) campus in Chennai

  • A majority of the sampling inside the UAS campus was done within the National Center for Biological Sciences (NCBS) complex (13°4056”N, 77°34035@E), where four trees and 31 nests were surveyed

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Summary

Introduction

Weaver ants are eusocial insects, belonging to the family Formicidae and order Hymenoptera, that have a unique nest-building behavior. A number of ant species, belonging to different genera such as Polyrhachis and Dendromyrmex, use larval silk in the construction of nests. A number of studies have been made on weaver ants from the time they were first described [1,2,3,4,5,6] with a focus on eusociality [2,3,4,5,6], interactions with plants [7, 8], and on their use as biological pest control agents [9,10,11,12,13].

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