SuperOrganism
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.

The evolution of ant agriculture

Go down

The evolution of ant agriculture Empty The evolution of ant agriculture

Post by Benoit Guenard Tue Mar 25, 2008 7:03 am

This week in PNAS (early edition) is published an article untitled: Major evolutionary transitions in ant agriculture, by Ted Schultz and Sean Brady.

In this article they present a phylogeny of the fungus-growing ants and different hypothesis to reconstruct the major transitions in ant-agriculture evolution.

Here is the abstract:

Agriculture is a specialized form of symbiosis that is known to have evolved in only four animal groups: humans, bark beetles, termites, and ants. Here, we reconstruct the major evolutionary transitions that produced the five distinct agricultural systems of the fungus-growing ants, the most well studied of the nonhuman agriculturalists. We do so with reference to the first fossilcalibrated, multiple-gene, molecular phylogeny that incorporates the full range of taxonomic diversity within the fungus-growing ant tribe Attini. Our analyses indicate that the original form of ant agriculture, the cultivation of a diverse subset of fungal species in the tribe Leucocoprineae, evolved 50 million years ago in thee Neotropics, coincident with the early Eocene climatic optimum. During the past 30 million years, three known ant agricultural systems, each involving a phylogenetically distinct set of derived fungal cultivars, have separately arisen from the original agricultural system. One of these derived systems subsequently gave rise to the fifth known system of agriculture, in which a single fungal species is cultivated by leaf-cutter ants. Leaf-cutter ants evolved remarkably recently (8–12 million years ago) to become the dominant herbivores of the New World tropics. Our analyses identify relict, extant attine ant species that occupy phylogenetic positions that are transitional between the agricultural systems. Intensive study of those species holds particular promise for clarifying the sequential accretion of ecological and behavioral characters that produced each of the major ant agricultural systems.
Benoit Guenard
Benoit Guenard
Admin

Number of posts : 67
Location : Raleigh, NC
Registration date : 2008-01-19

https://formicidae.darkbb.com

Back to top Go down

Back to top

- Similar topics

 
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum