Complex battlefields favor strong soldiers over large armies in social animal warfare

Author:

Lymbery Samuel J.123ORCID,Webber Bruce L.124ORCID,Didham Raphael K.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences, The University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia

2. Ecosystem Change Ecology Team, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) Health and Biosecurity, Floreat, WA 6014, Australia

3. Centre for Biosecurity and One Health, Harry Butler Institute, Murdoch University, Murdoch, WA 6150, Australia

4. Western Australian Biodiversity Science Institute, Perth, WA 6000, Australia

Abstract

In social animals, success can depend on the outcome of group battles. Theoretical models of warfare predict that group fighting ability is proportional to two key factors: the strength of each soldier in the group and group size. The relative importance of these factors is predicted to vary across environments [F. W. Lanchester, Aircraft in Warfare, the Dawn of the Fourth Arm (1916)]. Here, we provide an empirical validation of the theoretical prediction that open environments should favor superior numbers, whereas complex environments should favor stronger soldiers [R. N. Franks, L. W. Partridge, Anim. Behav. 45 , 197–199 (1993)]. We first demonstrate this pattern using simulated battles between relatively strong and weak soldiers in a computer-driven algorithm. We then validate this result in real animals using an ant model system: In battles in which the number of strong native meat ant Iridomyrmex purpureus workers is constant while the number of weak non-native invasive Argentine ant Linepithema humile workers increases across treatments, fatalities of I. purpureus are lower in complex than in simple arenas. Our results provide controlled experimental evidence that investing in stronger soldiers is more effective in complex environments. This is a significant advance in the empirical study of nonhuman warfare and is important for understanding the competitive balance among native and non-native invasive ant species.

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference59 articles.

1. F. W. Lanchester, Aircraft in Warfare, the Dawn of the Fourth Arm (Constable and Company Ltd., 1916).

2. Lanchester battles and the evolution of combat in ants

3. R. N. Franks, L. W. Partridge, “Lanchester’s theory of combat, self-organization, and the evolution of army ants and cellular societies” in Behavioural Mechanisms of Evolutionary Ecology, L. Real, Ed. (Chicago University Press, 1994), pp. 390–408.

4. Lanchester's attrition models and fights among social animals

5. A Brief Review on the Application of Lanchester’s Models of Combat in Nonhuman Animals

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1. Social interactions generate complex selection patterns in virtual worlds;Journal of Evolutionary Biology;2024-05-04

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