Mortality rates and division of labour in the leaf-cutting ant, Atta colombica
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Brown MJF, Bot ANM & Hart AG, Mortality rates and division of labour in the leaf-cutting ant, Atta colombica, Journal of Insect Science, 6, (18), 2006
Abstract
Division of labor in social groups is affected by the relative costs and benefits of conducting different tasks.
However, most studies have examined the dynamics of division of labor, rather than the costs and benefits
that presumably underlie the evolution of such systems. In social insects, division of labor may be
simplistically described as a source-sink system, with external tasks, such as foraging, acting as sinks for
the work force. The implications of two distinct sinks ? foraging and waste-heap working ? for division of
labor were examined in the leaf-cutting ant Atta colombica. Intrinsic mortality rates were similar across
external task groups. Exposure to waste (a task-related environment) led to a 60% increase in the mortality
rate of waste-heap workers compared to workers not exposed to waste. Given the small number of workers
present in the waste-heap task group, such increases in mortality are unlikely to affect division of labor and
task allocation dramatically, except perhaps under conditions of stress.
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Sponsor: STRI
Sponsor: Swiss National Science foundation
Sponsor: EU-TMR
Author's Homepage: http://people.tcd.ie/mabrown
Type of material: Journal Article

