Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
J R Soc Interface. 2023 Feb;20(199):20220521. doi: 10.1098/rsif.2022.0521. Epub 2023 Feb 1.
Individual animals engaged in collective behaviour can interchange their relative positions on a wide range of time scales. In situations where some regions of the group are more desirable, it is thought that more fit individuals will preferentially occupy the more favourable locations. However, this notion is difficult to test for animal groups like insect swarms that fluctuate rapidly and display little apparent structure. Here, we study the way that individuals in mating swarms of the non-biting midge sample the space available to them. We use Voronoi tessellation to define different regions of the swarm in a dynamic way, and show that midges indeed sample the swarm non-uniformly. However, individuals that preferentially reside in the interior or exterior of the swarm do not display statistically distinct flight behaviour, suggesting that differences in fitness must be assessed in a different way. Nevertheless, our results indicate that midge swarms are not random configurations of individuals but rather possess non-trivial internal structure.
个体动物在进行集体行为时可以在广泛的时间尺度上交换它们的相对位置。在群体中某些区域更受欢迎的情况下,人们认为更适应的个体将优先占据更有利的位置。然而,对于像昆虫群这样快速波动且表现出很少明显结构的动物群体,这种观念很难得到验证。在这里,我们研究了交配群中的个体如何对它们可利用的空间进行采样。我们使用 Voronoi 镶嵌来以动态的方式定义群体的不同区域,并表明蚊子确实对群体进行非均匀采样。然而,优先居住在群体内部或外部的个体并没有表现出统计学上明显不同的飞行行为,这表明适应度的差异必须以不同的方式来评估。尽管如此,我们的结果表明,蚊子群不是个体的随机配置,而是具有非平凡的内部结构。