He found that the entire range of worker actions fell into four basic categories: 1) walking and resting, 2) grooming, 3) eating and 4) excavating. Aside from walking and resting, individual termites spent most of their time grooming other termites. Termite workers will clean their own antennae but depend on their nest mates for overall body cleanliness.
Jeff recorded workers chewing and swallowing five things: 1) cellulose they picked up themselves, 2) something picked up while grooming another termite, 3) regurgitation, 4) something requested from another termite's mouth and 5) something requested from another termite's rear end.
In studying individual termites, Jeff found no consistency or pattern in the type of food acquisition of each termite. One termite might not eat for 24 hours, a second might have 10 meals from another termite's mouth and three from another's rear end, while a third might have 20 meals of cellulose debris it picked up for itself and two each from the mouth and rear end of a fellow termite. However, when Jeff combined the data from 36 termites, he found a one-third split between the three different types of food acquisition schemes for the colony. The apparent inconsistency in feed habits of individuals developed a pattern when compared in a colony setting.
He also found, when he examined the time spent in each of the four basic activities, that the average worker does nothing – walking and resting – for 80 percent of the day, but if he took into account the entire colony as a whole, at any given time, a portion of the colony was always doing something. One may ask, how can an insect that spends about 80 percent of its time doing nothing cause so much damage? Because a colony has enough members to always have some members feeding on cellulose in structures.