Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London (UCL), 22 Gordon Street, London, WC1H 0QB, UK
Department of Biology, Providence College Providence, 1 Cunningham Square, Providence, RI 02918, USA.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2018 Aug 19;373(1753). doi: 10.1098/rstb.2017.0237.
The physical spaces within which organisms live affect their biology and in many cases can be considered part of their extended phenotype. The nests of social insect societies have a fundamental impact on their ability to function as complex superorganisms. Ants in many species excavate elaborate subterranean nests, but others inhabit relatively small pre-formed cavities within rock crevices and hollow seeds. ants, which often nest within acorns, have become a model system for studying collective decision making. While these ants have demonstrated remarkable degrees of rationality and consistent precision with regard to their nest choices, never before has the fine scale internal architecture and spatial organization of their nests been investigated. We used X-ray microtomography to record high-resolution three-dimensional (3D) scans of colonies within their acorns. These data were then quantified using image segmentation and surface-based 3D visibility graph analysis, a new computational methodology for analysing spatial structures. The visibility graph analysis method integrates knowledge from the field of architecture with the empirical study of animal-built structures, thus providing the first methodological cross-disciplinary synergy of these two research areas. We found a surprisingly high surface area and degree of spatial heterogeneity within the acorn nests. Specific regions, such as those associated with the locations of queens and brood, were significantly more conducive to connectivity than others. From an architect's point of view, spatial analysis research has never focused on all-surface 3D movement, as we describe within ant nests. Therefore, we believe our approach will provide new methods for understanding both human design and the comparative biology of habitat spaces.This article is part of the theme issue 'Interdisciplinary approaches for uncovering the impacts of architecture on collective behaviour'.
生物体生活的物理空间会影响它们的生物学特性,在很多情况下,这些物理空间可以被视为它们扩展表型的一部分。社会昆虫群体的巢穴对它们作为复杂超个体发挥功能的能力有着根本性的影响。许多物种的蚂蚁会挖掘精心制作的地下巢穴,但也有其他物种栖息在岩石裂缝和空心种子中相对较小的预先形成的腔室里。在许多物种中,常在橡树果中筑巢的蚂蚁已成为研究集体决策的模式系统。虽然这些蚂蚁在选择巢穴方面表现出了非凡的理性程度和一致性精度,但它们巢穴的精细内部结构和空间组织从未被研究过。我们使用 X 射线微断层扫描技术记录了它们在橡树果中的巢穴的高分辨率三维(3D)扫描。然后,我们使用图像分割和基于表面的 3D 可见性图分析对这些数据进行了量化,这是一种用于分析空间结构的新计算方法。可见性图分析方法将建筑学领域的知识与动物建造结构的实证研究相结合,从而为这两个研究领域提供了第一个跨学科协同方法。我们发现,橡树果巢穴内的表面积和空间异质性程度令人惊讶地高。特定区域,如与蚁后和幼虫位置相关的区域,比其他区域更有利于连通性。从建筑师的角度来看,空间分析研究从未关注过我们在蚂蚁巢穴中所描述的所有表面 3D 运动。因此,我们相信我们的方法将为理解人类设计和栖息地空间的比较生物学提供新的方法。本文是主题为“揭示建筑对集体行为影响的跨学科方法”的一部分。