| Literature DB >> 28764664 |
Julia Giehr1, Jürgen Heinze2, Alexandra Schrempf2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The performance and fitness of social societies mainly depends on the efficiency of interactions between reproductive individuals and helpers. Helpers need to react to the group's requirements and to adjust their tasks accordingly, while the reproductive individual has to adjust its reproductive rate. Social insects provide a good system to study the interrelations between individual and group characteristics. In general, sterile workers focus on brood care and foraging while the queen lays eggs. Reproductive division of labor is determined by caste and not interchangeable as, e.g., in social mammals or birds. Hence, changing social and environmental conditions require a flexible response by each caste. In the ant Cardiocondyla obscurior, worker task allocation is based on age polyethism, with young workers focusing on brood care and old workers on foraging. Here, we examine how group age demography affects colony performance and fitness in colonies consisting of only old or young workers and a single old or young queen. We hypothesized that both groups will be fully functional, but that the forced task shift affects the individuals' performance. Moreover, we expected reduced worker longevity in groups with only young workers due to precocious foraging but no effect on queen longevity depending on group composition.Entities:
Keywords: Aging; Colony productivity; Group demography; Social insects; Task performance
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28764664 PMCID: PMC5540184 DOI: 10.1186/s12862-017-1026-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Fig. 1Experimental setup of Cardiocondyla obscurior colonies. Dotted lines represent workers, continuous lines queens
Fig. 2Brood production in colonies of the ant Cardiocondyla obscurior with different age compositions (mean, 95% CI). a Mean number of eggs produced during the first eight weeks after colony establishment and b) between colony establishment and the queen death, dependent on queen and worker age (12 weeks old vs. freshly eclosed when the colonies were set up). c Mean number of brood (eggs, larvae, pupae) produced between colony establishment and queen death, dependent on queen and worker age
Fig. 3Timing and success of brood production of Cardiocondyla obscurior colonies with different combinations of old and young queens and workers (mean, 95% CI). a Days between first larvae and first hatched worker. b Days between first larvae and first hatched sexual offspring. c Total number of produced workers. d Total number of produced sexuals
Fig. 4Distance [cm] covered by C. obscurior workers of different age during 10 min
Fig. 5Survival of workers dependent on queen (q) and worker (w) age during the entire duration of the experiment (phase I + II)