Coordination of movement via complementary interactions of leaders and followers in termite mating pairs

Author:

Mizumoto Nobuaki12ORCID,Lee Sang-Bin3ORCID,Valentini Gabriele1ORCID,Chouvenc Thomas3ORCID,Pratt Stephen C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287, USA

2. Okinawa Institute of Science & Technology Graduate University, Onna-son, Okinawa 940-0495, Japan

3. Entomology and Nematology Department, Ft. Lauderdale Research and Education Center, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida, Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33314, USA

Abstract

In collective animal motion, coordination is often achieved by feedback between leaders and followers. For stable coordination, a leader's signals and a follower's responses are hypothesized to be attuned to each other. However, their roles are difficult to disentangle in species with highly coordinated movements, hiding potential diversity of behavioural mechanisms for collective behaviour. Here, we show that two Coptotermes termite species achieve a similar level of coordination via distinct sets of complementary leader–follower interactions. Even though C. gestroi females produce less pheromone than C. formosanus , tandem runs of both species were stable. Heterospecific pairs with C. gestroi males were also stable, but not those with C. formosanus males. We attributed this to the males' adaptation to the conspecific females; C. gestroi males have a unique capacity to follow females with small amounts of pheromone, while C. formosanus males reject C. gestroi females as unsuitable but are competitive over females with large amounts of pheromone. An information-theoretic analysis supported this conclusion by detecting information flow from female to male only in stable tandems. Our study highlights cryptic interspecific variation in movement coordination, a source of novelty for the evolution of social interactions.

Funder

NSF-DEB

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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