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Stridulation-like behaviour in the Red Wood ant (Formica rufa)
Umeå University, Faculty of Science and Technology, Department of Ecology and Environmental Sciences.
Umeå University, Faculty of Science and Technology, Department of Ecology and Environmental Sciences. Department of Forest Ecology and Management, SLU, Umeå, Sweden.
Division of Solid Mechanics, Lund University, Lund, Sweden.
Department of Forest Ecology and Management, SLU, Umeå, Sweden.
2025 (English)In: Bioacoustics, ISSN 0952-4622, E-ISSN 2165-0586, Vol. 34, no 4, p. 468-480Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Insects are known for communicating via sounds created by rubbing body parts, a behaviour referred to as stridulation. Red Wood ants (Formica rufa group) are not known to possess stridulatory organs and have historically been categorised as a non-stridulating species. In this exploratory study, we report that Red Wood ants generate stridulation-like sounds, being about 0.7 ± 0.2 seconds-long (mean ± standard deviation), rattling sounds that were repeatedly generated in our laboratory setting (about 0.6 productions h-1 individual-1). In addition, we assess Red Wood ant behavioural responses to playbacks of this stridulation-like sound. Our playback experiments show that the stridulation-like sound initiates a reduced locomotory speed among conspecifics, an effect not seen when the ants were exposed to silence. However, this response was not different from that generated by an artificial pure tone, making the use of this stridulation-like sound uncertain. We hypothesise that the stridulation-like sound is produced by rubbing the leg against a ridge structure located on the anterior margin of the pronotum, a structure that we describe using X-ray micro-tomography. Our exploratory study suggests that the recorded sound may be part of Formica ant communication that is hard to detect and easily missed in behavioural assays.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Taylor & Francis Group, 2025. Vol. 34, no 4, p. 468-480
Keywords [en]
behaviour, bioacoustics, Biophony, invertebrates, soil, stridulation
National Category
Zoology
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-239475DOI: 10.1080/09524622.2025.2500391ISI: 001491564100001Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-105005578562OAI: oai:DiVA.org:umu-239475DiVA, id: diva2:1963566
Funder
Swedish Research Council, 2021-05445Swedish Research Council Formas, 2021-01192Available from: 2025-06-03 Created: 2025-06-03 Last updated: 2025-07-11Bibliographically approved

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Barbier, GaranceRollo, Mario Manoel

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