| Literature DB >> 23213476 |
Antonio Carlos Da-Silva1, Carlos A Navas, Pedro L Ribeiro.
Abstract
Leafcutter ants (Atta sexdens rubropilosa) (Forel 1908) have an elaborate social organization, complete with caste divisions. Activities carried out by specialist groups contribute to the overall success and survival of the colony when it is confronted with environmental challenges such as dehydration. Ants detect variations in humidity inside the nest and react by activating several types of behavior that enhance water uptake and decrease water loss, but it is not clear whether or not a single caste collects water regardless of the cost of bringing this resource back to the colony. Accordingly, we investigated water collection activities in three colonies of Atta sexdens rubropilosa experimentally exposed to water stress. Specifically, we analyzed whether or not the same ant caste foraged for water, regardless of the absolute energetic cost (distance) of transporting this resource back to the colony. Our experimental design offered water sources at 0 m, 1 m and 10 m from the nest. We studied the body size of ants near the water sources from the initial offer of water (time = 0) to 120 min, and tested for specialization. We observed a reduction in the average size and variance of ants that corroborated the specialization hypothesis. Although the temporal course of specialization changed with distance, the final outcome was similar among distances. Thus, we conclude that, for this species, a specialist (our use of the word "specialist" does not mean exclusive) task force is responsible for collecting water, regardless of the cost of transporting water back to the colony.Entities:
Keywords: Atta sexdens rubropilosa; Task division; Task specialization; Water stress
Year: 2012 PMID: 23213476 PMCID: PMC3507235 DOI: 10.1242/bio.2012703
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Open ISSN: 2046-6390 Impact factor: 2.422
Fig. 1.Experimental set-up consisting of a colony interconnected by trays to a water supply.
Total number of ants for each time interval and distance for all experimental tests.
Fig. 2.(A) Median size and 25–75% percentiles (dispersion lines) of the head capsule of ants collecting water at each experimental time interval. The median of the null distribution is represented by a straight line. (B) Mean coefficient of variation (CV) of ants collected at each time interval. This CV values result from 24 measures (3 colonies, 3 repetitions per colony and 3 distances, except colony B, 10 m, which was measured only twice). Dispersion lines are also 25–75% percentiles. The solid line represents the CV for the null distribution.
Fig. 3.Mean ant head capsule size at various time intervals after onset of water collection for different distances from the water source (0 m, 1 m and 10 m).
Vertical bars denote standard errors for each experimental time interval.
Fig. 4.Size distribution of ants collecting water at different time intervals.
The general distribution of ant size in the colony is presented for comparison (Null distribution).