Institute of Systematics and Evolution of Animals, Polish Academy of Sciences, Kraków, Poland.
Am Nat. 2012 Dec;180(6):744-50. doi: 10.1086/668009. Epub 2012 Oct 19.
Life-history theory predicts that organisms should alter their behavior if life expectancy declines. Recent theoretical work has focused on worker life expectancy as an ultimate factor in allocating risk-related tasks among the workforce in social insects. A key prediction of this evolutionary model is that workers with shorter life expectancy should perform riskier tasks. We tested this hypothesis, using laboratory colonies of the ant Myrmica scabrinodis. We modified foraging so that it differed in level of risk by manipulating distances, temperatures, and the presence of competitors on foraging patches. The life expectancies of foragers were shortened by poisoning with carbon dioxide or by injury through removal of their propodeal spines. Both treatments significantly shortened worker life expectancy in comparison with untreated ants. We show, for the first time, that foragers with a shorter life expectancy foraged under risk more often than foragers in the control group. Thus, a worker's strategy of foraging under risky circumstances appears to be fine-tuned to its life expectancy.
生活史理论预测,如果预期寿命下降,生物体应该改变其行为。最近的理论工作集中在工蚁的预期寿命上,将其作为在社会性昆虫的劳动力中分配与风险相关任务的终极因素。这一进化模型的一个关键预测是,预期寿命较短的工人应该执行更危险的任务。我们使用蚂蚁 Myrmica scabrinodis 的实验室殖民地来检验这一假设。我们通过操纵觅食的距离、温度和觅食斑块上竞争对手的存在,改变觅食的风险水平,使觅食变得不同。通过用二氧化碳毒害或通过去除它们的后胸刺来伤害觅食者,这两种处理都显著缩短了与未处理的蚂蚁相比,觅食者的预期寿命。我们首次表明,与对照组相比,预期寿命较短的觅食者在风险环境下觅食的频率更高。因此,工人在冒险环境下的觅食策略似乎与其预期寿命相匹配。