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Similar patterns of inter- action, such as network motifs and feedback loops, are used in many natural collective processes, proba- bly because they have evolved independently under similar pres- sures. Here I consider how three environmental constraints may shape the evolution of collective behavior: the patchiness of resourc- es, the operating costs of maintain- ing the interaction network that produces collective behavior, and the threat of rupture of the net- work. The ants are a large and successful taxon that have evolved in very diverse environments. Ex- amples from ants provide a starting point for examining more generally the fit between the particular pattern of interaction that regu- lates activity, and the environment in which it functions.
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 2014
The success of a social group is often driven by its collective characteristics and the traits of its individuals. Thus, understanding how collective behavior is influenced by the behavioral composition of group members is an important first step to understand the ecology of collective personalities. Here, we investigated how the efficiency of several group behaviors is influenced by the aggressiveness of its members in two species of Temnothorax ants. In our manipulation of group composition, we created two experimentally reconstituted groups in a split-colony design, i.e., each colony was split into an aggressive and a docile group of equal sizes. We found strong species-specific differences in how collective behaviors were influenced by its group members. In Temnothorax longispinosus, having more aggressive individuals improved colony defense and nest relocation efficiency. In addition, source colony identity strongly influenced group behavior in T. longispinosus, highlighting that manipulations of group compositions must control for the origin of the chosen individuals. In contrast, group composition and source colony did not influence collective behaviors in Temnothorax curvispinosus. This suggests that the mechanisms regulating collective behaviors via individual differences in behavior might differ among even closely related species.
Journal of The Royal Society Interface, 2011
Social insects exhibit coordinated behaviour without central control. Local interactions among individuals determine their behaviour and regulate the activity of the colony. Harvester ants are recruited for outside work, using networks of brief antennal contacts, in the nest chamber closest to the nest exit: the entrance chamber. Here, we combine empirical observations, image analysis and computer simulations to investigate the structure and function of the interaction network in the entrance chamber. Ant interactions were distributed heterogeneously in the chamber, with an interaction hot-spot at the entrance leading further into the nest. The distribution of the total interactions per ant followed a right-skewed distribution, indicating the presence of highly connected individuals. Numbers of ant encounters observed positively correlated with the duration of observation. Individuals varied in interaction frequency, even after accounting for the duration of observation. An ant's interaction frequency was explained by its path shape and location within the entrance chamber. Computer simulations demonstrate that variation among individuals in connectivity accelerates information flow to an extent equivalent to an increase in the total number of interactions. Individual variation in connectivity, arising from variation among ants in location and spatial behaviour, creates interaction centres, which may expedite information flow.
Journal of Insect Behavior, 2000
Aggregation is usually studied in functional terms, forgetting mechanisms. In this paper, experimental results on the ant Lasius niger, complemented by a model, allow us to understand the mechanisms responsible for aggregation and to study the influence of the population density on this phenomenon. The results show (1) a high level of aggregation and the emergence of a large cluster; (2) that aggregation results from an amplification mechanism-the greater the number of ants inside a cluster, the greater the time spent by one ant in this cluster; and (3) that population density has only a weak influence on the aggregation process. This method of analysis and these results can certainly be extended not only in social insects but also in other species, like subsocial arthropods.
PLoS ONE, 2014
The evolution of nest weaving, the inclusion of larval silk in the nest walls, is considered one of the pinnacles of cooperative behaviour in social insects. Within the four ant genera in which this has evolved, Oecophylla are unique in being the only group that precedes the deposition of larval silk by actively manipulating the leaf substrate to form a nest chamber. Here we provide the first descriptions of the manipulation process within a complex-systems framework. Substrate manipulation involves individual ants selecting, grasping and attempting to pull the edge of the substrate. These individuals are then joined by nest mates at the work site, who either select a site beside the first individual or grasp the body of the first or preceding worker to form a chain of pulling ants that together drag and bend the substrate. Site selection by individual workers is not random when confronted with an artificial leaf, with individuals more likely to grasp a substrate at its tip rather than along a more broad edge. The activity of additional individuals is also not random, with their activity being grouped in both space and time. Additional individuals are more likely to join an existing biting individual or pulling group. The positive feedback associated with the early stages of pulling behaviour appears typical for many of the collective actions observed in social insects.
Cold Spring Harbor protocols, 2009
The family Formicidae (ants) is composed of more than 12,000 described species that vary greatly in size, morphology, behavior, life history, ecology, and social organization. Ants occur in most terrestrial habitats and are the dominant animals in many of them. They have been used as models to address fundamental questions in ecology, evolution, behavior, and development. The literature on ants is extensive, and the natural history of many species is known in detail. Phylogenetic relationships for the family, as well as within many subfamilies, are known, enabling comparative studies. Their ease of sampling and ecological variation makes them attractive for studying populations and questions relating to communities. Their sociality and variation in social organization have contributed greatly to an understanding of complex systems, division of labor, and chemical communication. Ants occur in colonies composed of tens to millions of individuals that vary greatly in morphology, physio...
Insectes Sociaux, 2006
Social insects are well-known for their ability to achieve robust collective behaviours even when individuals have limited information. It is often assumed that such behaviours rely on very large group sizes, but many insect colonies start out with only a few workers. Here we investigate the influence of colony size on collective decision-making in the house-hunting of the ant Temnothorax albipennis. In experiments where colony size was manipulated by splitting colonies, we show that worker number has an influence on the speed with which colonies discover new nest sites, but not on the time needed to make a decision (achieve a quorum threshold) or total emigration time. This occurred because split colonies adopted a lower quorum threshold, in fact they adopted the same threshold in proportion to their size as full-size colonies. This indicates that ants may be measuring relative quorum, i.e. population in the new nest relative to that of the old nest, rather than the absolute number. Experimentally reduced colonies also seemed to gain more from experience through repeated emigrations, as they could then reduce nest discovery times to those of larger colonies. In colonies of different sizes collected from the field, total emigration time was also not correlated with colony size. However, quorum threshold was not correlated with colony size, meaning that individuals in larger colonies adopted relatively lower quorum thresholds. Since this is a different result to that from size-manipulated colonies, it strongly suggests that the differences between natural small and large colonies were not caused by worker number alone. Individual ants may have adjusted their behaviour to their colony’s size, or other factors may correlate with colony size in the field. Our study thus shows the importance of experimentally manipulating colony size if the effect of worker number on the emergence of collective behaviour is to be studied.
Animal Behaviour, 1987
The flexibility of colony organization in the red harvester ant, Pogonomyrmex barbatus, was investigated in the field in older (about 5 years) and younger (about 2 years) colonies. Perturbations affecting nest maintenance work, foraging and patrolling were made singly and in various combinations. In both younger and older colonies, events that directly affected only one activity caused changes in the numbers of ants engaged in other activities. An increase in patrolling early in the activity period caused foraging to decrease later on. Combined perturbations show that in both younger and older colonies, all three activities were linked by complex, synergistic interactions: the response to a perturbation affecting one activity itself varied, depending on the states of the other activities. The results suggest a more strongly homeostatic response to perturbations in older colonies than in younger ones: older colonies appeared to respond more consistently to single perturbations, and to decrease foraging less in combined perturbations, than did younger ones. Individual workers live only about a year. Thus similarities and differences in the flexibilities of colonies 3 or more years apart are organizational rather than a result of the accumulated experience of particular individuals. Ontogenetic changes in a colony's response to environmental stress may be ecologically important.
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 1999
We manipulated availability of food and nesting sites in one population of the forest ant Myrmica punctiventris. The manipulations produced significant changes in relatedness structure, reproductive allocation, and response to hierarchical selection. Food availability appeared to have a consistently stronger influence on these aspects of social organization than did availability of nesting sites. We interpret our experimental results in light of observed differences between populations, and discuss implications for kin selection dynamics.
Journal of Experimental Biology, 2011
SUMMARY Self-organisation underlies many collective processes in large animal groups, where coordinated patterns and activities emerge at the group level from local interactions among its members. Although the importance of key individuals acting as effective leaders has recently been recognised in certain collective processes, it is widely believed that self-organised decisions are evenly shared among all or a subset of individuals acting as decision-makers, unless there are significant conflicts of interests among group members. Here, we show that certain individuals are disproportionately influential in self-organised decisions in a system where all individuals share the same interests: nest site selection by the ant Temnothorax albipennis. Workers that visited a good available nest site prior to emigration (the familiar nest) memorised its location, and later used this memory to navigate efficiently and find that nest faster than through random exploration. Additionally, these w...
Presentación que resume algunos elementos que permiten pensar la investigación cualitativa en disciplinas como el trabajo social.
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