Data from: Effect of food restriction on survival and reproduction of a termite
Description
Food availability affects the trade-off between maintenance and reproduction in a wide range of organisms, but its effects on social insects remain poorly understood. In social insects, the maintenance-reproduction trade-off seems to be absent in individuals but may appear at the colony level, although this is rarely investigated. In this study, we restricted food availability in a termite species to test how it affects survival and reproduction, both at the individual and colony level. Using Bayesian multivariate response models, we found very minor effects of food restriction on the survival of queens, individual workers, or on the colonies. In contrast, queen fecundity was significantly reduced while colony-level fecundity (i.e., the number of dispersing alates, future reproductives) increased under food restriction as workers gave up cooperation within the colony and became alates that dispersed. Our study shows that life history trade-offs can be mitigated by individuals' social behaviours in social organisms.
Notes
Methods
C. secundus colonies were collected from dead Ceriops tagal trees in Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia (12°30'S 131°00'E) and kept in Pinus radiata wood blocks under lab conditions in Germany (28 °C, 70% relative humidity and a 12 h day/night cycle). Food availability was manipulated by adjusting the size of wood blocks. C. secundus senses a wood size of 1 termite per 2.5 cm³ as food shortage, while 1 termite per 10.0 cm³ reflects abundant food conditions. We set up 14 low-food colonies (1 termite: 2.5 cm³ of wood) and 21 control colonies (1 termite: 10.0 cm³ of wood) for this experiment. The experiment lasted for 18 months. In the end, we obtained fitness data for 34 colonies. We applied Bayesian multivariate response models to estimate the effect of food restriction on the survival and reproduction of individuals and colonies. R script can be found in the same data repository.
Files
Data.csv
Additional details
Related works
- Is cited by
- 10.1111/jeb.14154 (DOI)
- Is derived from
- 10.5281/zenodo.7516727 (DOI)
- Is source of
- 10.5281/zenodo.7036464 (DOI)