Biologie I, Universität Regensburg, Regensburg, Germany.
PLoS One. 2013;8(3):e59739. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0059739. Epub 2013 Mar 20.
Fermat's principle of least time states that light rays passing through different media follow the fastest (and not the most direct) path between two points, leading to refraction at medium borders. Humans intuitively employ this rule, e.g., when a lifeguard has to infer the fastest way to traverse both beach and water to reach a swimmer in need. Here, we tested whether foraging ants also follow Fermat's principle when forced to travel on two surfaces that differentially affected the ants' walking speed. Workers of the little fire ant, Wasmannia auropunctata, established "refracted" pheromone trails to a food source. These trails deviated from the most direct path, but were not different to paths predicted by Fermat's principle. Our results demonstrate a new aspect of decentralized optimization and underline the versatility of the simple yet robust rules governing the self-organization of group-living animals.
费马最短时间原理指出,光线在穿过不同介质时会沿着两点之间最快(而非最直接)的路径传播,从而导致在介质边界发生折射。人类本能地运用这一规则,例如,救生员必须推断出在海滩和水中最快的路径,以便到达有需要的游泳者。在这里,我们测试了当觅食蚂蚁被迫在两种不同程度影响蚂蚁行走速度的表面上行走时,它们是否也遵循费马最短时间原理。小红火蚁(Wasmannia auropunctata)的工蚁会在通往食物源的路上建立“折射”的信息素轨迹。这些轨迹偏离了最直接的路径,但与费马最短时间原理预测的路径没有区别。我们的结果展示了分散优化的一个新方面,并强调了简单而强大的规则在群居动物的自我组织中的多功能性。