Oecophylla biogenic amine and aggression assay data

Biogenic amine and agression assay data from Kamhi JF, Nunn K, Robson SKA, Traniello JFA (2015) Polymorphism and division of labour in a socially complex ant: neuromodulation of aggression in the Australian weaver ant, Oecophylla smaragdina. Includes behavioral data for all four aggression assays and biogenic amine measurements for interspecific agression assays and OA topical treatment assays in minor workers.

Abstract [Related Publication]: Complex social structure in eusocial insects can involve worker morphological and behavioural differentiation. Neuroanatomical variation may underscore worker division of labour, but the regulatory mechanisms of size-based task specialization in polymorphic species are unknown. The Australian weaver ant, Oecophylla smaragdina, exhibits worker polyphenism: larger major workers aggressively defend arboreal territories, whereas smaller minors nurse brood. Here, we demonstrate that octopamine (OA) modulates worker size-related aggression in O. smaragdina. We found that the brains of majors had significantly higher titres of OA than those of minors and that OA was positively and specifically correlated with the frequency of aggressive responses to non-nestmates, a key component of territorial defence. Pharmacological manipulations that effectively switched OA action in major and minor worker brains reversed levels of aggression characteristic of each worker size class. Results suggest that altering OA action is sufficient to produce differences in aggression characteristic of size-related social roles. Neuromodulators therefore may generate variation in responsiveness to task-related stimuli associated with worker size differentiation and collateral behavioural specializations, a significant component of division of labour in complex social systems.

The full methodology is available in the publication shown in the Related Publications link below.

    Data Record Details
    Data record related to this publication Oecophylla biogenic amine and aggression assay data
    Data Publication title Oecophylla biogenic amine and aggression assay data
  • Description

    Biogenic amine and agression assay data from Kamhi JF, Nunn K, Robson SKA, Traniello JFA (2015) Polymorphism and division of labour in a socially complex ant: neuromodulation of aggression in the Australian weaver ant, Oecophylla smaragdina. Includes behavioral data for all four aggression assays and biogenic amine measurements for interspecific agression assays and OA topical treatment assays in minor workers.

    Abstract [Related Publication]: Complex social structure in eusocial insects can involve worker morphological and behavioural differentiation. Neuroanatomical variation may underscore worker division of labour, but the regulatory mechanisms of size-based task specialization in polymorphic species are unknown. The Australian weaver ant, Oecophylla smaragdina, exhibits worker polyphenism: larger major workers aggressively defend arboreal territories, whereas smaller minors nurse brood. Here, we demonstrate that octopamine (OA) modulates worker size-related aggression in O. smaragdina. We found that the brains of majors had significantly higher titres of OA than those of minors and that OA was positively and specifically correlated with the frequency of aggressive responses to non-nestmates, a key component of territorial defence. Pharmacological manipulations that effectively switched OA action in major and minor worker brains reversed levels of aggression characteristic of each worker size class. Results suggest that altering OA action is sufficient to produce differences in aggression characteristic of size-related social roles. Neuromodulators therefore may generate variation in responsiveness to task-related stimuli associated with worker size differentiation and collateral behavioural specializations, a significant component of division of labour in complex social systems.

    The full methodology is available in the publication shown in the Related Publications link below.

  • Other Descriptors
    • Descriptor

      This dataset is available from Dryad in MS Excel (.xlsx) format. Dryad data package: Kamhi JF, Nunn K, Robson SKA, Traniello JFA (2015) Data from: Polymorphism and division of labour in a socially complex ant: neuromodulation of aggression in the Australian weaver ant, Oecophylla smaragdina. Dryad Digital Repository. http://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.36s2m

    • Descriptor type Note
  • Data type dataset
  • Keywords
    • neuromodulation
    • octopamine
    • territorial aggression
    • polymorphism
    • division of labour
    • Oecophylla smaragdina
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  • Research grant(s)/Scheme name(s)
  • Research themes
    Tropical Ecosystems, Conservation and Climate Change
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    Type Location Notes
    URL http://dx.doi.org/10.5061/dryad.36s2m
    The Data Manager is: Simon Robson
    College or Centre
    Access conditions Open: free access under license
  • Alternative access conditions
  • Data record size 1 file: 73.41 KB
  • Related publications
      Name Kamhi, J. Frances, Nunn, Kelley, Robson, Simon K.A., and Traniello, James F.A. (2015) Polymorphism and division of labour in a socially complex ant: neuromodulation of aggression in the Australian weaver ant, Oecophylla smaragdina. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B, Biological Sciences, 282 (1811). pp. 1-9.
    • URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2015.0704
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    Citation Robson, Simon (2015): Oecophylla biogenic amine and aggression assay data. James Cook University. https://research.jcu.edu.au/data/published/ccbc4cc7911e80a2a73bfbb630aa5444