0000000000470415

AUTHOR

Franziska Staab

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The chemistry of competition: exploitation of heterospecific cues depends on the dominance rank in the community

2014

Interspecific competition is an important ecological mechanism shaping the traits of the interacting species and structuring their communities. Less competitive species benefit from evading direct encounters with aggressive dominants, whereas dominant species could use cues left by subordinates to steal their resources or to chase them off. Here, we studied competitive interactions among five common and syntopic ant species in Central Europe (Formica polyctena, Formica rufibarbis, Lasius niger, Myrmica rubra and Tetramorium caespitum) and investigated their ability to react to heterospecific chemical cues. Using aggression assays, we established a clear dominance hierarchy of these species,…

Dominance hierarchyFormica polyctenabiologyEcologyLasiusFormica rufibarbisDominance (ecology)Animal Science and ZoologyInterspecific competitionMyrmica rubraTrail pheromonebiology.organism_classificationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsAnimal Behaviour
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