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| Social inhibition of division of labor
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"What is it that governs here, that issues orders, foresees the future...?"
--Maeterlinck, 1927
Division of labor is fundamental to the organization of insect
societies, and is thought to be one of the principal factors in
their ecological success. Division of labor in insect colonies
is characterized by two features: different activities are performed
simultaneously, by groups of specialized individuals, which is
assumed more efficient than if tasks are performed sequentially,
by unspecialized individuals.
A key feature of the division of labor in insect colonies is its
plasticity. Colonies respond to changing internal and external
conditions by adjusting the ratios of individual workers engaged
in the various tasks. This is accomplished in large part via the
behavioral flexibility of the individual workers themselves.
Worker behavioral flexibility contributes to the reproductive
success of a colony by enabling it to continue to grow, develop,
and ultimately produce a new generation of reproductive males and
females during changing colony conditions.
Sensitivity to change within a structured labor system is important
to social organization, but only now is beginning to be understood.
The regulation of division of labor relates to one of the central
problems in insect sociobiology, colony behavioral integration.
Some of the most remarkable traits of social insects, such as their
elaborate nests, potent defense strategies, sophisticated techniques
of foraging, and intricate but flexible systems of division of labor
involve the collective endeavors of perhaps thousands, or even
hundreds of thousands, of workers. But it is unlikely that each
individual can monitor the state of its whole colony and then perform
the tasks that are needed most. In addition, it long has been
recognized that highly eusocial insect societies function without
a key form of control that exists in human societies. Although
workers may play special roles in organizing specific tasks, there
is no evidence for the occurrence of colony "leaders", i.e.,
individuals that perceive all or most of the colony's requirements
and direct the activities of other colony members from one task to
another. The challenge is to understand the mechanisms of integration
that enable workers to respond to fragmentary information with actions
that are appropriate to the state of the whole colony.
In most species of highly eusocial insects studied to date, there
is age-related division of labor. Adult workers exhibit age
polyethism, a form of behavioral development in which they perform
different tasks at different ages. Young bees labor in the nest,
while older individuals forage outside. During each stage of
behavioral development a bee performs more-or-less the same kinds
of jobs for a sustained period of time.
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Representative Publications
Schulz DJ, Huang Z-Y, Robinson GE (1998) Effects of colony food shortage on
behavioral development in honey bees. Behav. Ecol. Sociobiol. 42:295-303.
(pdf)
Robinson GE, Huang Z-Y (1998) Colony integration in honey bees: Social control of
division of labor. Apidologie 29:159-171.
Pankiw T, Huang Z-Y, Robinson GE, Winston ML (1998) Effects of queen mandibular pheromone
on behavioural ontogeny and juvenile hormone titres in honey bees. J. Insect. Physiol.
44:685-692.
Huang Z-Y, Robinson GE (1996) Regulation of division of labor in honey bees via colony
age demography. Behav. Ecol. Sociobiol. 39:147-158.
Huang Z-Y, Robinson GE (1992) Colony behavioral integration in honey bees: worker-worker
interactions mediate plasticity in hormonally regulated division of labor.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 89:11726-11729. |
Updated 10/28/04 |