Messor barbarus
Messor barbarus is a species of harvester ant in the subfamily Myrmicinae. It is found In Southern Europe and Northern Africa.
Interaction with Humans
Messor barbarus causes 50–100% of the seed losses and is the most common ant in arable fields in northeastern Spain. These ants in particular made news headlines all over Spain when farmers believed they were stealing their seeds and began a cull, only to realise they actually play a massive part of the ecosystem and benefit the production for crop farmers completely. Messors will carry the seeds on their own roads back to the colony, sometimes up to 100ft away.Behavior
Trail foraging behavior
Messor barbarus is found to act in accordance with the optimal foraging theory, which predicts that selectivity in ants increases with increasing richness of resources in an area, as well as with increasing distance from starting location. Trails were likewise differentially favored according to the relative abundance of resources provided to the ant populations. Highly frequented trails had a higher mean rate per worker, meaning the harvesters returned higher rates of resources more efficiently along these trails. These trails drew more foraging ants to retrieve seeds on the whole, and the foraging ants returned seeds at a higher rate per capita. This foraging pattern indicates that relative food abundance along varying trails impacted the patterns of trail foraging behavior in Messor barbarus. For trails spanning long distances, ants exhibit behavior of strong chemical marking on preferred seeds to allow for the creation and maintenance of the route.Methods of recruitment
While individual harvesting is important for times of low-level homogeneously distributed resources, mechanisms which allow for rapid colonial recruitment and mobilization in harvesting of resource-dense regions allow for increased energy-gain on the colony level. There are three distinct methods of mass recruitment in harvesting ants.- Tandem running: using chemical or tactile signals, one ant leads a follower ant to a target location along the trail.
- Group recruitment: groups of five to thirty workers at a time are recruited by leaders which employ a motor display to induce following along a short-lived trail of recruitment pheromones. This tactic is often used in order to retrieve larger items.
- Mass recruitment: recruitment pheromones are secreted by foragers and workers leave the nest to follow established trails in relative proportion to the amount of recruitment pheromones present on a given trail.
Division of labor in trail foraging behavior
Small seeds, such as oat fragments or canary seeds, are favored for triggering the onset of recruitment and mobilization of harvesting in Messor barbarus populations. This is because they allow for a faster rate of return between the initial discovery of the food source and the subsequent return of scouts to the nest to relay information to the greater population. The trail is adjusted by a fleet of initial scouts which enhance the harvesting patterns to select for the preferred seed size. Worker ants are divided into three distinct size classes which in turn correspond to the size of the seeds harvested. All of the ants participate in the process of trail-laying, but within the size classes there are distinct roles. The majority of ants in the harvesting arena are Media ants, which are responsible primarily for trail-laying. Minor ants are most efficient in carrying smaller seeds such as oat fragments. Major ants are primarily involved in the harvesting of larger or more preferred seed species. The collective action of M. barbarus favors the minimization of foraging time rather than maximized efficiency of the energetic gain per item harvested. On the whole, group cooperation allows for a successful balance to be struck between the benefits of maximized food exploitation and colony-wide energy gain and the costs associated with increased predation risk.These different classes of workers cooperate to transport loads of seeds, often forming a transport chain. The first workers tend to be smaller to medium-sized, which corresponds to a high loading ratio. Lower loading ratios correspond to those larger workers which tend to align towards the end of the transport chain, transporting the larger goods for the colony. Overall, this strategy reduces time spent in transport to the nest and results in a net benefit to the colony.