Paul J, Roces F
Theodor Boveri Institut der Universität Würzburg, Lehrstuhl für Verhaltensphysiologie und Soziobiologie, Am Hubland, D-97074 Würzburg, Germany.
J Insect Physiol. 2003 Apr;49(4):347-57. doi: 10.1016/s0022-1910(03)00019-2.
This study investigates the techniques of nectar feeding in 11 different ant species, and quantitatively compares fluid intake rates over a wide range of nectar concentrations in four species that largely differ in their feeding habits. Ants were observed to employ two different techniques for liquid food intake, in which the glossa works either as a passive duct-like structure (sucking), or as an up- and downwards moving shovel (licking). The technique employed for collecting fluids at ad libitum food sources was observed to be species-specific and to correlate with the presence or absence of a well-developed crop in the species under scrutiny. Workers of ponerine ants licked fluid food during foraging and transported it as a droplet between their mandibles, whereas workers of species belonging to phylogenetically more advanced subfamilies, with a crop capable of storing liquids, sucked the fluid food, such as formicine ants of the genus Camponotus. In order to evaluate the performance of fluid collection during foraging, intake rates for sucrose solutions of different concentrations were measured in four ant species that differ in their foraging ecology. Scaling functions between fluid intake rates and ant size were first established for the polymorphic species, so as to compare ants of different size across species. Results showed that fluid intake rate depended, as expected and previously reported in the literature, on sugar concentration and the associated fluid viscosity. It also depended on both the species-specific feeding technique and the extent of specialization on foraging on liquid food. For similarly-sized ants, workers of two nectar-feeding ant species, Camponotus rufipes (Formicinae) and Pachycondyla villosa (Ponerinae), collected fluids with the highest intake rates, while workers of the leaf-cutting ant Atta sexdens (Myrmicinae) and a predatory ant from the Rhytidoponera impressa-complex (Ponerinae) did so with the lowest rate. Calculating the energy intake rates in mg sucrose per unit time, licking was shown to be a more advantageous technique at higher sugar concentrations than sucking, whereas sucking provided a higher energy intake rate at lower sugar concentrations.
本研究调查了11种不同蚂蚁物种的取食花蜜技巧,并定量比较了4种取食习性差异较大的蚂蚁物种在广泛的花蜜浓度范围内的液体摄入速率。观察发现,蚂蚁采用两种不同的液体食物摄取技巧,其中,舌要么作为被动的导管状结构(吸食),要么作为上下移动的铲子(舔食)。观察发现,在自由取食食物来源时用于收集液体的技巧具有物种特异性,并且与所研究物种中是否存在发育良好的嗉囊相关。猛蚁亚科的工蚁在觅食时舔食液体食物,并将其作为液滴在它们的上颚之间运输,而属于系统发育上更高级亚科、具有能够储存液体的嗉囊的物种的工蚁,则吸食液体食物,比如弓背蚁属的蚁亚科蚂蚁。为了评估觅食期间的液体收集能力,在4种觅食生态不同的蚂蚁物种中测量了不同浓度蔗糖溶液的摄入速率。首先为多态性物种建立了液体摄入速率与蚂蚁大小之间的标度函数,以便比较不同物种中不同大小的蚂蚁。结果表明,正如预期以及先前文献中所报道的,液体摄入速率取决于糖浓度和相关的液体粘度。它还取决于物种特异性的取食技巧以及对液体食物觅食的专业化程度。对于体型相似的蚂蚁,两种取食花蜜的蚂蚁物种,红足弓背蚁(蚁亚科)和绒毛猛蚁(猛蚁亚科)的工蚁收集液体的速率最高,而切叶蚁塞氏切叶蚁(切叶蚁亚科)和来自深沟猛蚁复合体的捕食性蚂蚁(猛蚁亚科)的工蚁收集液体的速率最低。计算每单位时间以毫克蔗糖计的能量摄入速率表明,在较高糖浓度下,舔食是比吸食更具优势的技巧,而在较低糖浓度下,吸食提供了更高的能量摄入速率。