Spatial effects, sampling errors, and task specialization in the honey bee

被引:0
作者
B. R. Johnson
机构
[1] University of California,Department of Ecology, Behavior, and Evolution
[2] San Diego,undefined
来源
Insectes Sociaux | 2010年 / 57卷
关键词
Division of labor; Response threshold concept; Task allocation; Social insects;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Task allocation patterns should depend on the spatial distribution of work within the nest, variation in task demand, and the movement patterns of workers, however, relatively little research has focused on these topics. This study uses a spatially explicit agent based model to determine whether such factors alone can generate biases in task performance at the individual level in the honey bees, Apis mellifera. Specialization (bias in task performance) is shown to result from strong sampling error due to localized task demand, relatively slow moving workers relative to nest size, and strong spatial variation in task demand. To date, specialization has been primarily interpreted with the response threshold concept, which is focused on intrinsic (typically genotypic) differences between workers. Response threshold variation and sampling error due to spatial effects are not mutually exclusive, however, and this study suggests that both contribute to patterns of task bias at the individual level. While spatial effects are strong enough to explain some documented cases of specialization; they are relatively short term and not explanatory for long term cases of specialization. In general, this study suggests that the spatial layout of tasks and fluctuations in their demand must be explicitly controlled for in studies focused on identifying genotypic specialists.
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页码:239 / 248
页数:9
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