Rehan Sandra M, Bulova Susan J, O'Donnell Sean
Department of Biological Sciences, University of New Hampshire, Durham, N.H., USA.
Brain Behav Evol. 2015;85(2):117-24. doi: 10.1159/000381414. Epub 2015 Apr 28.
In social insects, both task performance (foraging) and dominance are associated with increased brain investment, particularly in the mushroom bodies. Whether and how these factors interact is unknown. Here we present data on a system where task performance and social behavior can be analyzed simultaneously: the small carpenter bee Ceratina australensis. We show that foraging and dominance have separate and combined cumulative effects on mushroom body calyx investment. Female C. australensis nest solitarily and socially in the same populations at the same time. Social colonies comprise two sisters: the social primary, which monopolizes foraging and reproduction, and the social secondary, which is neither a forager nor reproductive but rather remains at the nest as a guard. We compare the brains of solitary females that forage and reproduce but do not engage in social interactions with those of social individuals while controlling for age, reproductive status, and foraging experience. Mushroom body calyx volume was positively correlated with wing wear, a proxy for foraging experience. We also found that, although total brain volume did not vary among reproductive strategies (solitary vs. social nesters), socially dominant primaries had larger mushroom body calyx volumes (corrected for both brain and body size variation) than solitary females; socially subordinate secondaries (that are neither dominant nor foragers) had the least-developed mushroom body calyces. These data demonstrate that sociality itself does not explain mushroom body volume; however, achieving and maintaining dominance status in a group was associated with mushroom body calyx enlargement. Dominance and foraging effects were cumulative; dominant social primary foragers had larger mushroom body volumes than solitary foragers, and solitary foragers had larger mushroom body volumes than nonforaging social secondary guards. This is the first evidence for cumulative effects on brain development by dominance and task performance.
在社会性昆虫中,任务执行(觅食)和优势地位都与大脑投入增加有关,尤其是在蕈形体中。这些因素是否以及如何相互作用尚不清楚。在这里,我们展示了一个可以同时分析任务执行和社会行为的系统的数据:小木匠蜂南方角蜂(Ceratina australensis)。我们发现觅食和优势地位对蕈形体花萼投入有单独和综合的累积影响。南方角蜂雌性在同一群体中同时进行独居和群居筑巢。社会群体由两姐妹组成:社会主导者,它垄断觅食和繁殖;社会从属者,它既不是觅食者也不繁殖,而是留在巢中作为守卫。我们在控制年龄、繁殖状态和觅食经验的同时,比较了觅食、繁殖但不参与社会互动的独居雌性与社会个体的大脑。蕈形体花萼体积与翅磨损呈正相关,翅磨损是觅食经验的一个指标。我们还发现,尽管总脑体积在不同繁殖策略(独居与群居筑巢者)之间没有差异,但社会优势主导者的蕈形体花萼体积(校正了脑和身体大小变化)比独居雌性大;社会从属者(既不占优势也不是觅食者)的蕈形体花萼发育最差。这些数据表明,社会性本身并不能解释蕈形体体积;然而,在群体中获得并维持优势地位与蕈形体花萼增大有关。优势地位和觅食效应是累积的;优势社会主导觅食者的蕈形体体积比独居觅食者大,独居觅食者的蕈形体体积比非觅食社会从属守卫大。这是优势地位和任务执行对大脑发育产生累积影响的首个证据。