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ORIGINS
OF THE HOSTILITY ASSAY
Myrmecologists
have long used the almost universal hostility of conspecific workers
from different colonies as a handy way to determine the limits of
polydomous colonies. In its simplest form, this consists of transferring
a worker from one nest to the immediate vicinity of another and
watching the responses of resident workers. If the transferred individual
is freely accepted, the two nests are part of the same colony; if
she is attacked, they are from different colonies.
As part of my historical studies,
I have wondered how long this assay has been in use, as it says
something about how colony limits have been conceived. Without having
surveyed the literature rigorously, the earliest definite uses of
this technique that have come to my attention are from the late
1800s. Henry Christopher McCook (1877, 1878) used it to delineate
colonies of the Allegheny mound-builder, Formica exsectoides,
as did G.A.J. Rothney (1890) for the Asian weaver ant, Oecophylla
smaragdina. Neither author made any reference to any earlier
use of this approach but treated it as a fairly obvious innovation,
which I suppose it is if one is disposed to conceive of mutually
hostile polydomous colonies.
R.A.F. de Reaumur, whose book on ants
was written around 1744 but apparently unknown until the 1920s,
makes no mention of such a technique. I regret that I have no access
to Pierre Huber's (1810, english edition 1820) book on ants, and
when I read it a while back I didn't note whether he used the technique.
One can't think of everything.
I would be very receptive to any reference
to use of the hostility assay in ants from before the 1870s.
Christopher K. Starr
University of the West Indies St Augustine
Trinidad & Tobago
email: ckstarr99@hotmail.com
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