Monaenkova Daria, Gravish Nick, Rodriguez Greggory, Kutner Rachel, Goodisman Michael A D, Goldman Daniel I
School of Physics, Georgia Institute of Technology, 837 State Street NW, Atlanta, GA 30332-0430, USA.
School of Physics, Georgia Institute of Technology, 837 State Street NW, Atlanta, GA 30332-0430, USA
J Exp Biol. 2015 May;218(Pt 9):1295-305. doi: 10.1242/jeb.113795. Epub 2015 May 7.
Collective construction of topologically complex structures is one of the triumphs of social behavior. For example, many ant species construct underground nests composed of networks of tunnels and chambers. Excavation by these 'superorganisms' depends on the biomechanics of substrate manipulation, the interaction of individuals, and media stability and cohesiveness. To discover principles of robust social excavation, we used X-ray computed tomography to monitor the growth in three dimensions of nests built by groups of fire ants (Solenopsis invicta) in laboratory substrates composed of silica particles, manipulating two substrate properties: particle size and gravimetric moisture content. Ants were capable of nest construction in all substrates tested other than completely dry or fully saturated; for a given particle size, nest volume was relatively insensitive to moisture content. Tunnels were deepest at intermediate moisture content and the maximum tunnel depth correlated with measured yield force on small rod-shaped intruders (a proxy for cohesive strength). This implies that increased cohesive strength allowed creation of tunnels that were resistant to perturbation but did not decrease individual excavation ability. Ants used two distinct behaviors to create pellets composed of wetted particles, depending on substrate composition. However, despite the ability to create larger stable pellets in more cohesive substrates, pellet sizes were similar across all conditions. We posit that this pellet size balances the individual's load-carrying ability with the need to carry this pellet through confined crowded tunnels. We conclude that effective excavation of similarly shaped nests can occur in a diversity of substrates through sophisticated digging behaviors by individuals which accommodate both differing substrate properties and the need to work within the collective.
拓扑复杂结构的集体构建是社会行为的一大成就。例如,许多蚂蚁种类会构建由隧道和巢室网络组成的地下巢穴。这些“超级生物体”的挖掘工作取决于底物操纵的生物力学、个体间的相互作用以及介质的稳定性和粘性。为了发现稳健的社会挖掘原则,我们使用X射线计算机断层扫描技术来监测火蚁(红火蚁)群体在由二氧化硅颗粒组成的实验室底物中构建的巢穴的三维生长情况,同时操控两个底物特性:颗粒大小和重量含水量。除了完全干燥或完全饱和的底物外,蚂蚁能够在所有测试的底物中构建巢穴;对于给定的颗粒大小,巢穴体积对含水量相对不敏感。隧道在中等含水量时最深,最大隧道深度与在小棒状侵入物上测得的屈服力(凝聚力强度的一个指标)相关。这意味着凝聚力强度的增加使得能够创建抗扰动的隧道,但不会降低个体挖掘能力。根据底物组成,蚂蚁使用两种不同的行为来创建由湿润颗粒组成的小丸。然而,尽管在粘性更强的底物中能够创建更大的稳定小丸,但在所有条件下小丸大小相似。我们认为这种小丸大小在个体的承载能力与将该小丸通过狭窄拥挤的隧道运送的需求之间取得了平衡。我们得出结论,通过个体复杂的挖掘行为,在各种底物中都可以有效地挖掘出形状相似的巢穴,这些行为既能适应不同的底物特性,又能满足在群体中工作的需求。