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Ant larvae sway to say, 'feed me!'.


Without legs or much of a face, ant larvae Larvae, in Roman religion
Larvae: see lemures.
 don't have many options for expression. They can sway, however, and when they do, they're signaling to their nursemaids that they want food, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the most detailed study yet of body language in ant larvae.

Researchers have long observed swaying by larvae of many ant species. And a 2003 study showed a positive correlation between a larva's motion and getting a meal.

More details have emerged in a study of the tropical ant Gnamptogenys striatula by Bruno Gobin of RSF-Royal Research Station of Gorsem in Sint-Truiden, Belgium, and his colleagues.

They fastened down an ant delicacy, a mealworm mealworm

see alphitobius diaperinus.


yellow mealworm
see tenebrio molitor.
, outside a lab colony's nursery so that nursemaid ants couldn't drag it home but had to carry their larval larval

1. pertaining to larvae.

2. larvate.


larval migrans
see cutaneous and visceral larva migrans.
 charges out to dinner. This arrangement made it easier for the researchers to keep track of which larvae were being chosen for feeding. Videotapes confirmed that those larvae were that swayed more inside the nursery were more likely to be carried out to feed. In a separate experiment, the researchers held back food at times and found that deprived larvae swayed more than well-fed ones.

To look for the long-term benefits of a feed-me signal, Gobin's group pampered pam·per  
tr.v. pam·pered, pam·per·ing, pam·pers
1. To treat with excessive indulgence: pampered their child.

2.
 some larvae with all-you-can-eat crickets and fruit flies but fed others only twice a week. Most of the well-fed young grew four reproductive organs Reproductive organs
The group of organs (including the testes, ovaries, and uterus) whose purpose is to produce a new individual and continue the species.

Mentioned in: Choriocarcinoma
 called ovarioles, compared with only two for the less-pampered ants. In this species, the more organs a worker has, the better her chance of becoming one of colony's reproductive females, note Gobin and his colleagues in the February Animal Behaviour.--S.M.
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Title Annotation:Zoology
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Mar 26, 2005
Words:271
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