Community ecology and sociobiology share a number of problems (e.g. understanding part-to-whole relationships), so sharing methods may be beneficial. In this paper, we re-analyze a large social network database for Camponotus fellah ants, from the perspective of keystone individuals, based on methods developed in community ecology. We study different network types for six colonies, over a time series of 10 days. These include the total network of weighted interactions, the subnetworks for the castes and the subnetworks for Queen-linked and Queen-independent individuals. We perform time-independent (i.e. average values) and temporal (i.e. trends) analyses. The most commonly used global network metrics showed high variability in time but no clear trends. Yet, the variability of a network centrality index (topological importance, TI), developed earlier in community ecology, shows clear increase in each colony over time, suggesting the emergence of keystone individuals as a general tendency in all studied ant colonies.

Emergence of keystone individuals in the social networks of the ant Camponotus fellah / Kovács, B.; Jordan, F.. - In: INSECTES SOCIAUX. - ISSN 0020-1812. - 71:2(2024), pp. 233-241. [10.1007/s00040-024-00963-6]

Emergence of keystone individuals in the social networks of the ant Camponotus fellah

Jordan, F.
2024-01-01

Abstract

Community ecology and sociobiology share a number of problems (e.g. understanding part-to-whole relationships), so sharing methods may be beneficial. In this paper, we re-analyze a large social network database for Camponotus fellah ants, from the perspective of keystone individuals, based on methods developed in community ecology. We study different network types for six colonies, over a time series of 10 days. These include the total network of weighted interactions, the subnetworks for the castes and the subnetworks for Queen-linked and Queen-independent individuals. We perform time-independent (i.e. average values) and temporal (i.e. trends) analyses. The most commonly used global network metrics showed high variability in time but no clear trends. Yet, the variability of a network centrality index (topological importance, TI), developed earlier in community ecology, shows clear increase in each colony over time, suggesting the emergence of keystone individuals as a general tendency in all studied ant colonies.
2024
Emergence of keystone individuals in the social networks of the ant Camponotus fellah / Kovács, B.; Jordan, F.. - In: INSECTES SOCIAUX. - ISSN 0020-1812. - 71:2(2024), pp. 233-241. [10.1007/s00040-024-00963-6]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11381/2990934
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