Abstract

Leafcutter ants cut trimmings from plants, carry them to their underground nests and cut them into smaller pieces before inoculating them with a fungus that serves as a primary food source for the colony. Cutting is energetically costly, so the amount of cutting is important in understanding foraging energetics. Estimates of the cutting density, metres of cutting per square metre of leaf, were made from samples of transported leaf cuttings and of fungal substrate from field colonies of Atta cephalotes and Atta colombica. To investigate cutting inside the nest, we made leaf-processing observations of our laboratory colony, A. cephalotes. We did not observe the commonly reported reduction of the leaf fragments into a pulp, which would greatly increase the energy cost of processing. Video clips of processing behaviours, including behaviours that have not previously been described, are linked. An estimated 2.9 (±0.3) km of cutting with mandibles was required to reduce a square metre of leaf to fungal substrate. Only about 12% (±1%) of this cutting took place outside of the nest. The cutting density and energy cost is lower for leaf material with higher ratios of perimeter to area, so we tested for, and found that the laboratory ants had a preference for leaves that were pre-cut into smaller pieces. Estimates suggest that the energy required to transport and cut up the leaf material is comparable to the metabolic energy available from the fungus grown on the leaves, and so conservation of energy is likely to be a particularly strong selective pressure for leafcutter ants.

Highlights

  • Ants play a dominant ecological role in nearly every terrestrial environment on Earth [1,2]

  • Atta cephalotes and A. colombica cut disc-shaped pieces of leaves from certain plant species, carry them to underground chambers and cut them into many small fragments

  • Processed fragments are incorporated into a comb structure and inoculated with the basidiomycete fungus Leucoagaricus gongylophorus [11] that serves as a food source as well as a home for brood

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Summary

Introduction

Ants play a dominant ecological role in nearly every terrestrial environment on Earth [1,2]. Leaf cutting and carrying are probably the most energetically expensive tasks performed by Atta species [12,13,14]. As energy costs of cutting and carrying are high, and the caloric contents of leaves tend to be low, it is possible that these energy costs are a significant fraction of the caloric profit from the leaves and may set a limit to the distance at which the collection of leaf species with high water content (low calories per mass) is energetically profitable. We have estimated values for the ratio of above-ground to below-ground cutting as well as the total cutting density using materials collected in Minca, Colombia (from A. cephalotes), and Tiputini, Ecuador (from A. colombica), along with leaf-processing observations of our laboratory colony (A. cephalotes) at the University of Oregon. We tested the hypothesis that leafcutter ants prefer to harvest smaller leaves, because smaller leaves require less cutting

Processing observations
Estimation of cutting density and ratio
Error analysis
Testing preference for pre-cut leaves
Processing observations and discussion
Holding
Licking
Scraping
Cutting
Puncturing
Adding abdominal emissions
Caching fragments
Inserting fragments
3.10. Inoculating fragments
Cutting density and ratio results
Findings
Pre-cut leaf preference results
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