Small Matters
Millions of years ago, leafcutter ants learned to grow fungi. But how? And why? And what do they have to teach us?
- By Douglas Foster
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2002, Subscribe
Beneath the rain forest canopy, a low roar from insects builds to periodic crescendos as auburn- and tangerine-colored leaves bigger than dinner plates drift down from branches above. Scarlet macaws and yellow-ridged toucans issue raspy calls. Capuchin monkeys drop detritus from the trees onto four biologists who are inching their way along a stretch of Amazon rain forest, just a few hours’ drive north of Manaus, Brazil. Inside this vast tract of jungle, which runs unbroken for hundreds of miles to the Venezuelan border, they’re hunting for clues to explain an extraordinary evolutionary event.
Somewhere near this spot 50 million years ago, after the dinosaurs disappeared, certain ant species began cultivating and eating fungus. Of all animals on earth, only these particular ants, several kinds of beetles and termites—and, of course, human beings—grow their own food. Somehow, this new tribe of ants, the attines, went—in anthropomorphic terms—from being hunter-gatherers to farmers. How and why they did so remains a tantalizing mystery.
Ted Schultz, a research entomologist from the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Natural History, kneels with the intensity of a supplicant at the entrance to an ant nest. He has a mop of tar-black hair and eyes that resemble large charcoal orbs behind thick lenses. The object of his interest is a nest of leafcutters, the showiest of the attine ants.
Twenty feet up a nearby trumpet tree, the ants set upon freshly sprouted leaves, mandibles open, carving out elegant half-moons. They load these cuttings, which weigh up to ten times more than they do, over their backs and head for home, streaming back down the tree in an undulating line not unlike a band of tipsy piano movers. From a little distance, the ants, wearing stylish neon-green hats, look to be dancing.
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Comments (3)
I'm neither biologist nor linguist, but it's my understanding that primitive in phylogeny denotes ancestor relationship:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primitive_%28phylogenetics%29
Primitive is a descriptive term often used in the field of evolution to describe particular species or traits that are characteristic of an older evolutionary scale of development relative to more recent developments. [...]
In modern biology, phylogeny, the study of evolutionary relationships, takes the form of extending branches. Instead of having the evolutionary system as a division between higher (superior) and lower (inferior) organisms, each branch extends outwards to represent temporal and developmental distance. The preferred term for cladists is basal; its antonym is derived.
So for example a derived parasite living in a relatively stable environment may be less elaborated than its primitive free-living ancestor.
From the article: "“The trouble is that you can get trapped by the metaphor[,]”".
Posted by Torbjörn Larsson, OM on September 15,2009 | 11:56 AM
I was reminded of Douglas Hoffstader's Ant Hillary while reading this exploring of the symbiosis of fungus, bacteria, mold and ant. And wondered where is the defining member of this symbiosis, and could imagine scenarios in which the mold and the antibiotic producer might just as easily have been the instigator of this arrangement as the fungus and the ant. I even imagine a possibility of and extension of the Hoffstatder's considering Ant Hillary as a single organism to envelop all four species in colony as a single higher proto-organism. IT is certainly no more improbable that the complex organization of the individual human with its various codependent components such as the seeming separate species of mitochondria. And it makes me wonder where the human mind will have evolved if the species survives 50 million years.
Posted by Mike TAlbert on September 15,2009 | 11:46 AM
“What we’re looking for is a species that has retained some of the traits that characterized the ancestor.” It’s not unlike how linguists visit isolated peoples to study how patterns of speech have changed, he says. “That’s something like what we’re doing here, looking at how the most primitive behavior might have yielded more elaborate behavior.”
Linguists don't do that; we may study isolated people, but there's no evidence that such people have any more primitive languages than anyone else.
Posted by McSwell on September 14,2009 | 09:33 PM