IFIBYNE   05513
INSTITUTO DE FISIOLOGIA, BIOLOGIA MOLECULAR Y NEUROCIENCIAS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Individual size as determinant of sugar responsiveness in ants
Autor/es:
ROXANA JOSENS; M. AGUSTINA LOPEZ; NELIDA JOFRE
Revista:
BEHAVIORAL ECOLOGY AND SOCIOBIOLOGY
Editorial:
SPRINGER
Referencias:
Año: 2018 vol. 72 p. 1 - 9
ISSN:
0340-5443
Resumen:
Social insects commonly exhibit division of labor in non-reproductive tasks. Task allocation may be related to size, form, and ergonomic differences when workers are anatomically variable. Carpenter ants Camponotus mus collecting nectar exhibit a wide forager size variation, thus raising the question of whether large and minor workers differ in their gustatory responsiveness andspecialize, therefore, on different nectar sources. To answer this question, we first established the sucrose concentration at which small and large ants in the laboratory respond appetitively to a sugar solution (sucrose acceptance threshold, SAT) after experiencing a high or a low starvation regime (4- or 1-day carbohydrate deprivation, respectively). Under high starvation, no differences in SATs were found between larger and smaller ants. Under low starvation, both sizes increased their SATs but larger ants had a higher SAT, thus preferring more concentrated solutions while smaller ants responded mostly to more diluted sucrose solutions. In a field assay in which the distribution of larger and smaller ants on sugary food sources was analyzed, small and medium ants were found?in different proportions?at all food sources while larger ants were only found at nectar sources with a higher sugar flow rate, i.e., providing more sugar per unit time. Both field and laboratory assays supported that sugar-related parameters act as determinants of the size distribution of ants among food sources. In addition, interindividual differences in alternative non-sugarrelated variables may contribute to this distribution, leading thereby to a potential nectar foraging specialization.