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11 February 2021 Evolutionary and Ecological Pressures Shaping Social Wasps Collective Defenses
Mateus Detoni, Xesús Feás, Robert L. Jeanne, Kevin J. Loope, Sean O'Donnell, Davide Santoro, Seirian Sumner, Jennifer M. Jandt
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Abstract

Social insects are well known for their aggressive (stinging) responses to a nest disturbance. Still, colonies are attacked due to the high-protein brood cached in their nests. Social wasps have evolved a variety of defense mechanisms to exclude predators, including nest construction and coordinated stinging response. Which predatory pressures have shaped the defensive strategies displayed by social wasps to protect their colonies? We reviewed the literature and explored social media to compare direct and indirect (claims and inferences) evidence of predators attacking individuals and colonies of wasps. Individual foraging wasps are predominantly preyed upon by birds and other arthropods, whereas predators on wasp brood vary across subfamilies of Vespidae. Polistinae wasps are predominantly preyed upon by ants and Passeriformes birds, whereas Vespinae are predominantly preyed upon by badgers, bears, and hawks. Ants and hornets are the primary predators of Stenogastrinae colonies. The probability of predation by these five main Orders of predators varies across continents. However, biogeographical variation in prey–predator trends was best predicted by climate (temperate vs. tropical). In social wasps' evolutionary history, when colonies were small, predation pressure likely came from small mammals, lizards, or birds. As colonies evolved larger size and larger rewards for predators, the increased predation pressure likely selected for more effective defensive responses. Today, primary predators of large wasp colonies seem to be highly adapted to resist or avoid aggressive nest defense, such as large birds and mammals (which were not yet present when eusociality evolved in wasps), and ants.

© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Entomological Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.
Mateus Detoni, Xesús Feás, Robert L. Jeanne, Kevin J. Loope, Sean O'Donnell, Davide Santoro, Seirian Sumner, and Jennifer M. Jandt "Evolutionary and Ecological Pressures Shaping Social Wasps Collective Defenses," Annals of the Entomological Society of America 114(5), 581-595, (11 February 2021). https://doi.org/10.1093/aesa/saaa063
Received: 30 September 2020; Accepted: 13 December 2020; Published: 11 February 2021
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KEYWORDS
aggression behavior
nest defense
Polistinae
Stenogastrinae
Vespinae
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