Nest enlargement in leaf-cutting ants: relocated brood and fungus trigger the excavation of new chambers.
During colony growth, leaf-cutting ants enlarge their nests by excavating tunnels and chambers housing their fungus gardens and brood. Workers are expected to excavate new nest chambers at locations across the soil profile that offer suitable environmental conditions for brood and fungus rearing. It...
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doaj-2d4734c558514f049a79c69545dc0de72020-11-25T02:06:08ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0195e9787210.1371/journal.pone.0097872Nest enlargement in leaf-cutting ants: relocated brood and fungus trigger the excavation of new chambers.Daniela RömerFlavio RocesDuring colony growth, leaf-cutting ants enlarge their nests by excavating tunnels and chambers housing their fungus gardens and brood. Workers are expected to excavate new nest chambers at locations across the soil profile that offer suitable environmental conditions for brood and fungus rearing. It is an open question whether new chambers are excavated in advance, or will emerge around brood or fungus initially relocated to a suitable site in a previously-excavated tunnel. In the laboratory, we investigated the mechanisms underlying the excavation of new nest chambers in the leaf-cutting ant Acromyrmex lundi. Specifically, we asked whether workers relocate brood and fungus to suitable nest locations, and to what extent the relocated items trigger the excavation of a nest chamber and influence its shape. When brood and fungus were exposed to unfavorable environmental conditions, either low temperatures or low humidity, both were relocated, but ants clearly preferred to relocate the brood first. Workers relocated fungus to places containing brood, demonstrating that subsequent fungus relocation spatially follows the brood deposition. In addition, more ants aggregated at sites containing brood. When presented with a choice between two otherwise identical digging sites, but one containing brood, ants' excavation activity was higher at this site, and the shape of the excavated cavity was more rounded and chamber-like. The presence of fungus also led to the excavation of rounder shapes, with higher excavation activity at the site that also contained brood. We argue that during colony growth, workers preferentially relocate brood to suitable locations along a tunnel, and that relocated brood spatially guides fungus relocation and leads to increased digging activity around them. We suggest that nest chambers are not excavated in advance, but emerge through a self-organized process resulting from the aggregation of workers and their density-dependent digging behavior around the relocated brood and fungus.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4022738?pdf=render |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Daniela Römer Flavio Roces |
spellingShingle |
Daniela Römer Flavio Roces Nest enlargement in leaf-cutting ants: relocated brood and fungus trigger the excavation of new chambers. PLoS ONE |
author_facet |
Daniela Römer Flavio Roces |
author_sort |
Daniela Römer |
title |
Nest enlargement in leaf-cutting ants: relocated brood and fungus trigger the excavation of new chambers. |
title_short |
Nest enlargement in leaf-cutting ants: relocated brood and fungus trigger the excavation of new chambers. |
title_full |
Nest enlargement in leaf-cutting ants: relocated brood and fungus trigger the excavation of new chambers. |
title_fullStr |
Nest enlargement in leaf-cutting ants: relocated brood and fungus trigger the excavation of new chambers. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Nest enlargement in leaf-cutting ants: relocated brood and fungus trigger the excavation of new chambers. |
title_sort |
nest enlargement in leaf-cutting ants: relocated brood and fungus trigger the excavation of new chambers. |
publisher |
Public Library of Science (PLoS) |
series |
PLoS ONE |
issn |
1932-6203 |
publishDate |
2014-01-01 |
description |
During colony growth, leaf-cutting ants enlarge their nests by excavating tunnels and chambers housing their fungus gardens and brood. Workers are expected to excavate new nest chambers at locations across the soil profile that offer suitable environmental conditions for brood and fungus rearing. It is an open question whether new chambers are excavated in advance, or will emerge around brood or fungus initially relocated to a suitable site in a previously-excavated tunnel. In the laboratory, we investigated the mechanisms underlying the excavation of new nest chambers in the leaf-cutting ant Acromyrmex lundi. Specifically, we asked whether workers relocate brood and fungus to suitable nest locations, and to what extent the relocated items trigger the excavation of a nest chamber and influence its shape. When brood and fungus were exposed to unfavorable environmental conditions, either low temperatures or low humidity, both were relocated, but ants clearly preferred to relocate the brood first. Workers relocated fungus to places containing brood, demonstrating that subsequent fungus relocation spatially follows the brood deposition. In addition, more ants aggregated at sites containing brood. When presented with a choice between two otherwise identical digging sites, but one containing brood, ants' excavation activity was higher at this site, and the shape of the excavated cavity was more rounded and chamber-like. The presence of fungus also led to the excavation of rounder shapes, with higher excavation activity at the site that also contained brood. We argue that during colony growth, workers preferentially relocate brood to suitable locations along a tunnel, and that relocated brood spatially guides fungus relocation and leads to increased digging activity around them. We suggest that nest chambers are not excavated in advance, but emerge through a self-organized process resulting from the aggregation of workers and their density-dependent digging behavior around the relocated brood and fungus. |
url |
http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4022738?pdf=render |
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