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蚂蚁的群体搜索:运动决定足迹,足迹影响运动。

Collective search in ants: Movement determines footprints, and footprints influence movement.

作者信息

Popp Stefan, Dornhaus Anna

机构信息

Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, United States of America.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2024 Apr 23;19(4):e0299432. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0299432. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Collectively searching animals might be expected to coordinate with their groupmates to cover ground more evenly or efficiently than uncoordinated groups. Communication can lead to coordination in many ways. Previous work in ants suggests that chemical 'footprints', left behind by individuals as they walk, might serve this function by modulating the movement patterns of following ants. Here, we test this hypothesis by considering the two predictions that, first, ants may turn away from sites with higher footprint concentrations (klinotaxis), or, second, that they may change their turning patterns depending on the presence of footprints (klinokinesis). We tracked 5 whole colonies of Temnothorax rugatulus ants in a large arena over 5h. We approximated the footprint concentration by summing ant visitations for each point in the arena and calculated the speed and local path straightness for each point of the ant trajectories. We counterintuitively find that ants walk slightly faster and straighter in areas with fewer footprints. This is partially explained by the effect that ants who start out from the nest walking straighter move on average further away from the nest, where there are naturally fewer footprints, leading to an apparent relationship between footprint density and straightness However, ants walk slightly faster and straighter off footprints even when controlling for this effect. We tested for klinotaxis by calculating the footprint concentrations perceived by the left and right antennae of ants and found no evidence for a turning-away (nor turning-towards) behavior. Instead, we found noticeable effects of environmental idiosyncrasies on the behavior of ants which are likely to overpower any reactions to pheromones. Our results indicate that search density around an ant colony is affected by several independent processes, including individual differences in movement pattern, local spatial heterogeneities, and ants' reactions to chemical footprints. The multitude of effects illustrates that non-communicative coordination, individual biases and interactions with the environment might have a greater impact on group search efficiency and exploratory movements than pheromone communication.

摘要

集体搜寻的动物可能会被期望与同伴进行协作,以便比不协调的群体更均匀、高效地覆盖区域。交流可以通过多种方式导致协作。先前对蚂蚁的研究表明,个体行走时留下的化学“足迹”可能通过调节跟随蚂蚁的运动模式来发挥这一作用。在这里,我们通过考虑两个预测来检验这一假设:第一,蚂蚁可能会从足迹浓度较高的地方转向(趋流性);第二,它们可能会根据足迹的存在改变转向模式(趋动性)。我们在一个大场地中对5个皱胸蚁蚁群进行了5小时的追踪。我们通过汇总场地中每个点的蚂蚁访问次数来估算足迹浓度,并计算蚂蚁轨迹上每个点的速度和局部路径直线度。我们得出了与直觉相反的结果,即蚂蚁在足迹较少的区域行走得略快且更直。部分原因是,从巢穴出发时行走更直的蚂蚁平均会离巢穴更远,而那里自然足迹较少,从而导致足迹密度与直线度之间呈现出一种明显的关系。然而,即使控制了这种影响,蚂蚁在没有足迹的地方行走也会略快且更直。我们通过计算蚂蚁左右触角感知到的足迹浓度来测试趋流性,没有发现转向(或朝某个方向转向)行为的证据。相反,我们发现环境特性对蚂蚁行为有显著影响,这种影响可能会压倒对信息素的任何反应。我们的结果表明,蚁群周围的搜索密度受到几个独立过程的影响,包括运动模式的个体差异、局部空间异质性以及蚂蚁对化学足迹的反应。多种影响表明,非交流性协作、个体偏好以及与环境的相互作用可能比信息素交流对群体搜索效率和探索性运动的影响更大。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/2fa7/11037541/b338c842267a/pone.0299432.g001.jpg

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