Qin Wenquan, Chen Xuan, Hooper-Bùi Linda M, Cai Jiacheng, Wang Lei, Sun Zhaohui, Wen Xiujun, Wang Cai
Guangdong Key Laboratory for Innovation Development and Utilization of Forest Plant Germplasm, College of Forestry and Landscape Architecture, South China Agricultural University, Guangzhou, Guangdong, China.
Department of Biology, Salisbury University, Salisbury, MD, USA.
PeerJ. 2019 Jan 25;7:e6349. doi: 10.7717/peerj.6349. eCollection 2019.
The food-burying behavior has been reported in many mammals and birds, but was rarely observed in invertebrates. The red imported fire ants, Buren, is an invasive pest in many areas of the world that usually performing food-burying during the foraging processes. However, the impacted factors and measureable patterns of this behavior is largely unknown. In the present study, food-burying vs food-transport behaviors of were observed under laboratory and field conditions. When starved (no food was provided for 37 days) in the laboratory, food (sausage) was consumed by large numbers of ants, and few burying behaviors were observed. However, when food was provided until satiation of the colonies, food-transport was suppressed and significantly more soil particles were relocated on the food and graph paper square (where the food was placed) when compared with these colonies exposed to starved conditions. Videotapes showed that soil particles (1.47 ± 0.09 mm) were preferentially placed adjacent to (in contact with) the food items at the beginning; and after the edges were covered, ants transported significantly smaller soil particles (1.13 ± 0.06 mm) to cover the food. Meanwhile, larger particles (1.96 ± 0.08 mm) were pulled/dragged around (but not in contact with) the food. Interestingly, only a small number of ants, mainly the small workers, were involved in food-burying, and the ants tended to repeatedly transport soil particles. A total of 12 patterns of particle transport were identified, and soil particles were most frequently picked from the foraging arena and subsequently placed adjacent to the food. In the field, almost all released food was actively transported by workers, and no burying behavior was observed. Our results show that the food-burying behavior of may be associated with the suppressed foraging activity, and the burying task may be carried out by certain groups of workers.
许多哺乳动物和鸟类都有报道过埋食行为,但在无脊椎动物中很少观察到。红火蚁(Buren)是世界许多地区的一种入侵害虫,通常在觅食过程中进行埋食。然而,这种行为的影响因素和可测量模式在很大程度上尚不清楚。在本研究中,在实验室和野外条件下观察了红火蚁的埋食行为与运食行为。在实验室中,当蚂蚁饥饿(37天未提供食物)时,大量蚂蚁会食用食物(香肠),几乎观察不到埋食行为。然而,当为蚁群提供食物直至饱腹时,运食行为受到抑制,与处于饥饿状态的蚁群相比,放置食物的地方(食物和方格纸方块上)有更多的土壤颗粒被重新安置。录像显示,一开始土壤颗粒(1.47±0.09毫米)优先放置在食物旁边(与之接触);边缘被覆盖后,蚂蚁会运送明显更小的土壤颗粒(1.13±0.06毫米)来覆盖食物。与此同时,较大的颗粒(1.96±0.08毫米)被拉/拖到食物周围(但不与之接触)。有趣的是,只有少数蚂蚁,主要是小工蚁,参与埋食,而且蚂蚁倾向于反复运送土壤颗粒。总共识别出12种颗粒运输模式,土壤颗粒最常从觅食区域采集,随后放置在食物旁边。在野外,几乎所有投放的食物都被工蚁积极运走,未观察到埋食行为。我们的结果表明,红火蚁的埋食行为可能与觅食活动受到抑制有关,而且埋食任务可能由特定群体的工蚁执行。