Sensory evidence for complex communication and advanced sociality in early ants

Author:

Taniguchi Ryo1ORCID,Grimaldi David A.2ORCID,Watanabe Hidehiro3ORCID,Iba Yasuhiro4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Natural History Sciences, Graduate School of Science, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Hokkaido 060-0810, Japan.

2. Division of Invertebrate Zoology, American Museum of Natural History, New York, NY 10024-5192, USA.

3. Department of Earth System Science, Fukuoka University, Fukuoka, Fukuoka 814-0180 Japan.

4. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Hokkaido 060-0810, Japan.

Abstract

Advanced social behavior, or eusociality, has been evolutionarily profound, allowing colonies of ants, termites, social wasps, and bees to dominate competitively over solitary species throughout the Cenozoic. Advanced sociality requires not just nestmate cooperation and specialization but refined coordination and communication. Here, we provide independent evidence that 100-million-year-old Cretaceous ants in amber were social, based on chemosensory adaptations. Previous studies inferred fossil ant sociality from individual ants preserved adjacent to others. We analyzed several fossil ants for their antennal sensilla, using original rotation imaging of amber microinclusions, and found an array of antennal sensilla, specifically for alarm pheromone detection and nestmate recognition, sharing distinctive features with extant ants. Although Cretaceous ants were stem groups, the fossilized sensilla confirm hypotheses of their complex sociality.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

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