Abstract

BackgroundThe outcome of male-male competition can be predicted from the relative fighting qualities of the opponents, which often depend on their age. In insects, freshly emerged and still sexually inactive males are morphologically indistinct from older, sexually active males. These young inactive males may thus be easy targets for older males if they cannot conceal themselves from their attacks. The ant Cardiocondyla obscurior is characterised by lethal fighting between wingless (“ergatoid”) males. Here, we analyse for how long young males are defenceless after eclosion, and how early adult males can detect the presence of rival males.ResultsWe found that old ergatoid males consistently won fights against ergatoid males younger than two days. Old males did not differentiate between different types of unpigmented pupae several days before emergence, but had more frequent contact to ready-to-eclose pupae of female sexuals and winged males than of workers and ergatoid males. In rare cases, old ergatoid males displayed alleviated biting of pigmented ergatoid male pupae shortly before adult eclosion, as well as copulation attempts to dark pupae of female sexuals and winged males. Ergatoid male behaviour may be promoted by a closer similarity of the chemical profile of ready-to-eclose pupae to the profile of adults than that of young pupae several days prior to emergence.ConclusionYoung ergatoid males of C. obscurior would benefit greatly by hiding their identity from older, resident males, as they are highly vulnerable during the first two days of their adult lives. In contrast to the winged males of the same species, which are able to prevent ergatoid male attacks by chemical female mimicry, young ergatoids do not seem to be able to produce a protective chemical profile. Conflicts in male-male competition between ergatoid males of different age thus seem to be resolved in favour of the older males. This might represent selection at the colony level rather than the individual level.

Highlights

  • The outcome of male-male competition can be predicted from the relative fighting qualities of the opponents, which often depend on their age

  • Male fighting Fights lasted from ten minutes to 60 hours, with the duration not being significantly dependent on whether the old ergatoid males was paired with a freshly emerged (d0; median fight length, 25%-75% quartile range: 367 min, 89–475 min), a one-day old (d1; 420 min, 246– 1104 min) or a two-day old (d2; 473 min, 349– 1601 min) opponent (Kruskal-Wallis test H = 1.54, 2df, P = 0.46)

  • Old males initiated the fights more frequently when their opponent was freshly emerged (100%, 10/10 fights) or one-day old (86%, 6/7 fights) than when the young male was already two days old (43%, 3/7 fights; Fisher’s exact test, P = 0.013; posthoc comparison d0-d2: P < 0.017, d0-d1 and d1-d2 n.s.; Figure 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

The outcome of male-male competition can be predicted from the relative fighting qualities of the opponents, which often depend on their age. Freshly emerged and still sexually inactive males are morphologically indistinct from older, sexually active males These young inactive males may be easy targets for older males if they cannot conceal themselves from their attacks. Intra-nest mating leads to a “seraglio situation” [5] like in several species of fig wasps and parasitoid wasps [6,7], i.e., it allows males to monopolise matings with newly emerging female sexuals. This selects for rigorous fights even among closely related males [8,9,10]

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