| Literature DB >> 35467116 |
Daniela Römer1, Gonzalo Pacheco Aguilar2, Annika Meyer2, Flavio Roces2.
Abstract
Leaf-cutting ants are highly successful herbivores in the Neotropics. They forage large amounts of fresh plant material to nourish a symbiotic fungus that sustains the colony. It is unknown how workers organize the intra-nest distribution of resources, and whether they respond to increasing demands in some fungus gardens by adjusting the amount of delivered resources accordingly. In laboratory experiments, we analyzed the spatial distribution of collected leaf fragments among nest chambers in Acromyrmex ambiguus leaf-cutting ants, and how it changed when one of the fungus gardens experienced undernourishment. Plant fragments were evenly distributed among nest chambers when the fungal symbiont was well nourished. That pattern changed when one of the fungus gardens was undernourished and had a higher leaf demand, resulting in more leaf discs delivered to the undernourished fungus garden over at least 2 days after deprivation. Some ants bypassed nourished gardens to directly deliver their resource to the chamber with higher nutritional demand. We hypothesize that cues arising from that chamber might be used for orientation and/or that informed individuals, presumably stemming from the undernourished chamber, may preferentially orient to them.Entities:
Keywords: Decentralized control; Decision-making; Insect-fungus symbiosis; Local cues; Nutrition; Pheromone trail
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35467116 PMCID: PMC9038804 DOI: 10.1007/s00114-022-01797-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Naturwissenschaften ISSN: 0028-1042
Fig. 1Setup with foraging arena (left) connected by a bridge to a subcolony of 3 fungus chambers and a final waste box (brown). Diluted honey (yellow dish) and water (blue dish) were offered in the small box before the nest entrance (black arrow). The yellow arrow marks the chamber that experienced leaf deprivation in the ‘undernourished’ experiment
Fig. 2a Number of leaf discs delivered to different chambers in both the nourished and undernourished experiments (box: 25–75% percentiles, line: median, whiskers: min–max values; 2-way repeated-measures ANOVA and Kruskal–Wallis test with Tukey post hoc test; boxes sharing the same letters do not differ statistically, P ≤ 0.05). Figure legend applies to both a and b. b First delivery of offered discs in each chamber, as percentage of the total delivery of first discs for each condition (nnourished = 36, nundernourished day 1 = 39, nundernourished day 2 = 39; Fisher’s exact test, **P < 0.01, *P ≤ 0.05, ns = not significant)
Statistics for the first delivery of offered leaf discs, after Fisher’s exact test: a Pairwise comparisons of the overall distribution pattern between different experimental conditions. For each chamber, counts of delivered discs were pooled for the three time points, as there were no statistical differences in the delivery among them; b Pairwise comparisons between different experimental conditions, for each chamber
| a | Comparison | |||
| Nourished | 0.0086 | ** | ||
| Nourished | 0.0107 | * | ||
| Undernourished day 1 | 0.78 | NS | ||
| b | Chamber | Comparison | ||
| 1 | Nourished | 0.011 | * | |
| 1 | Nourished | 0.006 | ** | |
| 1 | Undernourished day 1 | 1 | NS | |
| 2 | Nourished | 0.011 | * | |
| 2 | Nourished | 0.006 | ** | |
| 2 | Undernourished day 1 | 1 | NS | |
| 3 | nourished | 1 | NS | |
| 3 | nourished | 0.68 | NS | |
| 3 | undernourished day 1 | 0.67 | NS | |