Ants wise enough to quit when their teeth wear out
January 9th, 2011 - 4:04 pm ICT by IANSLondon, Jan 9 (IANS) Ants have a well-deserved reputation for strength, organisation and teamwork. But a key to their success is the ability to identify the importance of age in the work place.
A study of Central American leaf-cutter ants has shown that the younger and more vigorous members of the colony are given the toughest job of cutting through the leaves they harvest, the journal Behaviour Ecology and Sociobiology reports.
Their sharp young teeth do this job efficiently, but as they get older their teeth become relatively worn and blunt, according to the Daily Mail.
Accordingly, the former chompers are assigned to become carriers — transporting the leaves back to the colony where they are harvested for food.
Like humans, these insects recognise that older members of the group can still make a worthwhile contribution to society.
The findings by researchers from the University of Oregon and the Oregon State University supports previous research showing the survival of a leaf-cutter colony depends on the efficiency of its workers.
“Cutting leaves is hard work,” said Robert Schofield, who led the team of US scientists.
“Much of the cutting is done with a V-shaped blade between teeth on their mandibles. This blade starts out as sharp as the sharpest razor blade that humans have developed,” Schofield said.
But over time, the teeth become blunter and the cutting job slows down.
The team estimated that because of this age-related wear, a colony spent twice the energy cutting leaves than it would if all the ants had sharp mandibles.
- Leaf-cutters switch jobs to ensure efficiency - Dec 10, 2010
- Pre-historic fish had tiniest yet sharpest teeth - Mar 20, 2012
- Queen ants resort to mob tactics to reach top - Oct 03, 2011
- Ant farmers use bacteria to make their gardens grow - Nov 20, 2009
- Ants defend their host tree - May 22, 2011
- Tiny ants can teach us a thing or two about pesticides - Nov 17, 2008
- Desert ants use magnetic cues to return home - Mar 11, 2012
- Fungus-farming ants use 'antibiotic weed killers' to maintain their gardens - Aug 27, 2010
- Fungus turn rainforest ants into zombies - May 09, 2011
- How thousands of fire ants stay afloat despite piling on top of one another - Apr 26, 2011
- How ants maintain stability while carrying heavy loads - Jun 21, 2010
- 400,000-yr-old remains show 'humans evolved from Middle East, not Africa' - Dec 28, 2010
- Sea urchin's teeth: Key to everlasting sharp tools - Dec 26, 2010
- Ants use Velcro-like claws to trap prey 5,700 times their own weight - Jul 04, 2010
- Ants can smell out rivals - Feb 23, 2012
Tags: chompers, daily mail, deserved reputation, ecology, efficiency, insects, leaf cutter ants, leaves, london jan, mandibles, oregon state university, previous research, razor blade, robert schofield, scientists, sociobiology, teamwork, teeth, university of oregon, worthwhile contribution