Gibb Heloise, Andersson Jon, Johansson Therese
Department of Wildlife, Fish and Environmental Sciences, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Umea, Sweden; Department of Ecology, Environment and Evolution, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia.
Department of Wildlife, Fish and Environmental Sciences, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences , Umea , Sweden.
PeerJ. 2016 May 18;4:e2049. doi: 10.7717/peerj.2049. eCollection 2016.
Background. Foraging efficiency is critical in determining the success of organisms and may be affected by a range of factors, including resource distance and quality. For social insects such as ants, outcomes must be considered at the level of both the individual and the colony. It is important to understand whether anthropogenic disturbances, such as forestry, affect foraging loads, independent of effects on the quality and distribution of resources. We asked if ants harvest greater loads from more distant and higher quality resources, how individual efforts scale to the colony level, and whether worker loads are affected by stand age. Methods. First, we performed a fine-scale study examining the effect of distance and resource quality (tree diameter and species) on harvesting of honeydew by red wood ants, Formica aquilonia, in terms of crop load per worker ant and numbers of workers walking up and down each tree (ant activity) (study 1). Second, we modelled what the combination of load and worker number responses meant for colony-level foraging loads. Third, at a larger scale, we asked whether the relationship between worker load and resource quality and distance depended on stand age (study 2). Results. Study 1 revealed that seventy percent of ants descending trees carried honeydew, and the percentage of workers that were honeydew harvesters was not related to tree species or diameter, but increased weakly with distance. Distance positively affected load mass in both studies 1 and 2, while diameter had weak negative effects on load. Relationships between load and distance and diameter did not differ among stands of different ages. Our model showed that colony-level loads declined much more rapidly with distance for small diameter than large diameter trees. Discussion. We suggest that a negative relationship between diameter and honeydew load detected in study 1 might be a result of crowding on large diameter trees close to nests, while the increase in honeydew load with distance may result from resource depletion close to nests. At the colony level, our model suggests that very little honeydew was harvested from more distant trees if they were small, but that more distant larger trees continued to contribute substantially to colony harvest. Although forestry alters the activity and foraging success of red wood ants, study 2 showed that it does not alter the fundamental rules determining the allocation of foraging effort.
背景。觅食效率对于决定生物体的成功至关重要,并且可能受到一系列因素的影响,包括资源距离和质量。对于蚂蚁等社会性昆虫而言,必须在个体和蚁群层面来考量结果。了解诸如林业等人为干扰是否会影响觅食负荷,而不考虑其对资源质量和分布的影响,这一点很重要。我们探究了蚂蚁是否会从距离更远且质量更高的资源中收获更多负荷,个体的努力如何扩展到蚁群层面,以及工蚁的负荷是否受到林分年龄的影响。方法。首先,我们进行了一项精细尺度的研究,考察距离和资源质量(树径和树种)对红木蚁(Formica aquilonia)采集蜜露的影响,具体涉及每只工蚁的嗉囊负荷以及在每棵树上上下走动的工蚁数量(蚂蚁活动)(研究1)。其次,我们模拟了负荷和工蚁数量反应的组合对蚁群层面觅食负荷的意义。第三,在更大尺度上,我们探究工蚁负荷与资源质量和距离之间的关系是否取决于林分年龄(研究2)。结果。研究1表明,70% 从树上下来的蚂蚁携带了蜜露,采集蜜露的工蚁百分比与树种或树径无关,但随距离略有增加。在研究1和2中,距离对负荷质量均有正向影响,而树径对负荷有微弱的负向影响。不同年龄林分中,负荷与距离和树径之间的关系并无差异。我们的模型表明,对于小直径树木,蚁群层面的负荷随距离下降的速度比大直径树木快得多。讨论。我们认为,研究1中检测到的树径与蜜露负荷之间的负相关关系,可能是由于靠近巢穴的大直径树木上蚂蚁拥挤所致,而蜜露负荷随距离增加可能是由于巢穴附近资源枯竭。在蚁群层面,我们的模型表明,如果远处的树木较小,几乎采集不到蜜露,但远处的大树仍会为蚁群收获做出很大贡献。尽管林业活动改变了红木蚁的活动和觅食成功率,但研究2表明,它并未改变决定觅食努力分配的基本规则。