Strong positive allometry of bite force in leaf-cutter ants increases the range of cuttable plant tissues

Frederik Püffel, F. Roces, D. Labonte
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Atta leaf-cutter ants are the prime herbivore in the Neotropics: differently-sized foragers harvest plant material to grow a fungus as crop. Efficient foraging involves complex interactions between worker-size, task-preferences and plant-fungus-suitability; it is, however, ultimately constrained by the ability of differently-sized workers to generate forces large enough to cut vegetation. In order to quantify this ability, we measured bite forces of A. vollenweideri leaf-cutter ants spanning more than one order of magnitude in body mass. Maximum bite force scaled almost in direct proportion to mass; the largest workers generated peak bite forces 2.5 times higher than expected from isometry. This remarkable positive allometry can be explained via a biomechanical model that links bite forces with substantial size-specific changes in the morphology of the musculoskeletal bite apparatus. In addition to these morphological changes, we show that bite forces of smaller ants peak at larger mandibular opening angles, suggesting a size-dependent physiological adaptation, likely reflecting the need to cut leaves with a thickness that corresponds to a larger fraction of the maximum possible gape. Via direct comparison of maximum bite forces with leaf-mechanical properties, we demonstrate (i) that bite forces in leaf-cutter ants need to be exceptionally large compared to body mass to enable them to cut leaves; and (ii), that the positive allometry enables colonies to forage on a wider range of plant species without the need for extreme investment into even larger workers. Our results thus provide strong quantitative arguments for the adaptive value of a positively allometric bite force.
切叶蚁咬合力的强正异速性增加了可切植物组织的范围
切叶蚁是新热带地区的主要食草动物:不同大小的觅食蚁收获植物材料,种植真菌作为作物。高效觅食涉及工蚁大小、任务偏好和植物真菌适应性之间复杂的相互作用;然而,它最终受到不同体型工人产生足够大的力量来砍伐植被的能力的限制。为了量化这种能力,我们测量了A. vollenweideri切叶蚁在体重上跨越一个数量级以上的咬合力。最大咬合力几乎与质量成正比;最大的工人产生的峰值咬合力比等距法预期的高2.5倍。这种显著的正异速可以通过生物力学模型来解释,该模型将咬合力与肌肉骨骼咬合装置形态的实质性尺寸特异性变化联系起来。除了这些形态学变化外,我们还发现,较小的蚂蚁的咬合力在较大的下颌开口角度时达到峰值,这表明了一种大小依赖的生理适应,可能反映了它们需要切割厚度与最大可能开口的较大比例相对应的叶子。通过对最大咬合力与叶片机械特性的直接比较,我们证明了:(1)切叶蚁的咬合力需要比身体质量大得多,才能切叶;(ii)正异速生长使蚁群能够在更大范围的植物物种上觅食,而不需要对更大的工蜂进行极端的投资。因此,我们的结果为正异速咬合力的自适应值提供了强有力的定量论证。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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