Exploration and exploitation of food sources by social insect colonies: a revision of the scout-recruit concept
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Publication date
2000-10-16
Authors
Biesmeijer, J.C.
Vries, Han de
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Document Type
Article
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Abstract
Social insect colonies need to explore and exploit
multiple food sources simultaneously and efficiently.
At the individual level, this colony-level behaviour
has been thought to be taken care of by two types of individual:
scouts that independently search for food, and
recruits that are directed by nest mates to a food source.
However, recent analyses show that this strict division of
labour between scouts and recruits is untenable. Therefore,
a modified concept is presented here that comprises
the possible behavioural states of an individual forager
(novice forager, scout, recruit, employed forager, unemployed
experienced forager, inspector and reactivated
forager) and the transitions between them. The available
empirical data are reviewed in the light of both the old
and the new concept, and probabilities for the different
transitions are derived for the case of the honey-bee. The
modified concept distinguishes three types of foragers
that may be involved in the exploration behaviour of the
colony: novice bees that become scouts, unemployed experienced
bees that scout, and lost recruits, i.e. bees that
discover a food source other than the one to which they
were directed to by their nest mates. An advantage of the
modified concept is that it allows for a better comparison
of studies investigating the different roles performed by
social insect foragers during their individual foraging
histories.
Keywords
Social insects, Scout, Recruit, Communication, Foraging