Jh. Fewell et Re. Page, The emergence of division of labour in forced associations of normally solitary ant queens, EVOL EC RES, 1(5), 1999, pp. 537-548
We tested the hypothesis that division of labour is an inescapable property
of social groups, rather than an evolutionary event separate from socialit
y We propose a variance-based emergent property model in which division of
labour can spontaneously emerge when (1) individuals in a group vary in the
ir intrinsic sensitivity to stimuli for a given task, and (2) the performan
ce of a task by individuals with higher task sensitivities reduces performa
nce of the task by the other group members. Under these conditions, the ind
ividuals with higher sensitivity become the task specialists. To determine
if division of labour can occur in the absence of direct selection, we crea
ted artificial foundress associations (groups of queens during nest establi
shment) of the ant Pogonomyrmex barbatus, which has no history of cooperati
ve colony founding. We compared the incidence of task specialization in thi
s species to that in Pogonomyrmex californicus, in which foundress associat
ions commonly occur. Levels of task specialization for nest excavation were
high in both species, arguing that division of labour emerges in groups re
gardless of evolutionary history. Consistent with the variance-based model,
the role of nest excavation specialist in P. barbatus foundress associatio
ns could be predicted by both (1) differences in excavation roles in prior
pairs and (2) variation in excavation activity while solitary. Furthermore,
the assumption of the excavator role by one foundress dramatically reduced
the performance of that task by the other foundress of the pair. We also f
ound a strong negative relationship between excavation activity and foundre
ss survival in P. barbatus, suggesting that division of labour in this cont
ext may act as a constraint on social evolution.