Abstract

This study examines how an ant colony's foraging range changes as the colony grows older, and whether colonies preserve their foraging ranges from year to year. Foraging ranges were measured in 88 colonies of known age over the course of 5 years. A seed-eating ant, Pogonomyrmex barbatus, colony lives for 15–20 years, reaching a stable size of about 12 000 workers when it is about 5 years old. On average, foraging ranges of colonies 2 years and older were similar in size, so a colony with about 2000 workers uses as much area to forage as one with 12 000. A colony's foraging range increased most from ages 1 to 2 years, when the colony is still very small; increase of foraging area appears to be related to colony growth rather than overall colony size. From year to year, colonies did not retain or expand from a core foraging range. Instead, only about half the foraging range a colony used one summer was used by it the previous summer. However, the overlap of foraging ranges from year to year was significantly greater than expected if foraging ranges were distributed each year at random. The extent of year-to-year turnover in foraging range did not depend on colony age. Most colonies in which reproductives were observed were 5 years or older. These results are considered in the light of previous work showing that 3–4-year-old colonies, at about 75% of mature size, are more persistent in conflict with neighbours over foraging space than older, larger colonies. Effects of colony size on the rate of encounter with neighbours, and the costs of reproduction, may determine developmental changes in the territorial behaviour of an ant colony.

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