Abstract

Waste management is important in insect societies because waste can be hazardous to adults, brood and food stores. The general organization of waste management and the influence of task partitioning, division of labor and age polyethism on waste processing were studied in three colonies of the tropical American stingless bee Melipona beecheii Bennett in Yucatan, Mexico. Waste generated in the colony (feces, old brood cells, cocoons, dead adults and brood) was collected by workers throughout the nest and taken to specific waste dumps within the nest. During the day, workers based at the waste dumps formed waste pellets, which they directly transferred in 93% of cases, to other workers who subsequently removed them from the nest. This is an example of task partitioning and is hypothesized to improve nest hygiene as has been found in leafcutting ants, Atta. To investigate division of labor and age polyethism we marked a cohort of 144 emerging workers. Workers forming waste pellets were on average 31.2±6.5 days old (±SD, N= 40, range of 18-45 days). The life span of M. beecheii workers was 49.0±14.0 days (N= 144). There was no difference in the life span of workers who formed (52.2±11.6 days, N= 40) or did not form (49.9±11.5 days, N= 97) waste pellets, suggesting that waste work did not increase mortality. Although waste was probably not hazardous to adults and brood, because the dumps are located outside the brood chamber, its presence inside the nests can attract phorid flies and predators, which can harm the colony.

Highlights

  • Social living can cause problems which are not faced by non-social organisms, or exacerbates problems that are dealt with by solitary dwellers

  • Again only during the day, waste pellets were removed from the nest

  • Our results show that waste disposal in M. beecheii is subject to partitioned organization, encompassing spatial management, division of labor with age polyethism, and task partitioning

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Summary

Introduction

Social living can cause problems which are not faced by non-social organisms, or exacerbates problems that are dealt with by solitary dwellers. Waste poses a serious problem for social insects living within enclosed nests (Bot et al, 2001; Hart & Ratnieks, 2001, 2002a; Jackson & Hart, 2009). Localizing waste such as in a midden heap (e.g. Atta colombica Guérin-Méneville, Hart & Ratnieks, 2002a; Messor barbarus (Linnaeus), Anderson & Ratnieks, 2000), or removing waste regularly (e.g. defecating outside the nest and undertaking behavior in Apis mellifera Linnaeus, Visscher, 1983; Seeley, 1985) are common strategies to reduce waste building and its negative impact. Division of labor has proved to be an important component of work organization in social insect colonies (Robinson, 1992; Gordon, 1996)

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