TY - JOUR
T1 - Desert ants achieve reliable recruitment across noisy interactions
AU - Razin, Nitzan
AU - Eckmann, Jean-Pierre
AU - Feinerman, Ofer
N1 - Clore Foundation; Israel Science Foundation (FIRST grant) [1694/10]; Minerva Foundation; Fonds National Suisse; ERCWe thank Abraham Hefetz and Elisha Moses for helpful feedback. This research was supported by the Clore Foundation, the Israel Science Foundation (FIRST grant no. 1694/10), the Minerva Foundation, the Fonds National Suisse and the ERC. O.F. is the incumbent of the Shlomo and Michla Tomarin Career Development Chair.
PY - 2013/4/5
Y1 - 2013/4/5
N2 - We study how desert ants, Cataglyphis niger, a species that lacks pheromonebased recruitment mechanisms, inform each other about the presence of food. Our results are based on automated tracking that allows us to collect a large database of ant trajectories and interactions. We find that interactions affect an ant's speed within the nest. Fast ants tend to slow down, whereas slow ones increase their speed when encountering a faster ant. Faster ants tend to exit the nest more frequently than slower ones. So, if an ant gains enough speed through encounters with others, then she tends to leave the nest and look for food. On the other hand, we find that the probability for her to leave the nest depends only on her speed, but not on whether she had recently interacted with a recruiter that has found the food. This suggests a recruitment system in which ants communicate their state by very simple interactions. Based on this assumption, we estimate the information-theoretical channel capacity of the ants' pairwise interactions. We find that the response to the speed of an interacting nest-mate is very noisy. The question is then how random interactions with ants within the nest can be distinguished from those interactions with a recruiter who has found food. Our measurements and model suggest that this distinction does not depend on reliable communication but on behavioural differences between ants that have found the food and those that have not. Recruiters retain high speeds throughout the experiment, regardless of the ants they interact with; non-recruiters communicate with a limited number of nestmates and adjust their speed following these interactions. These simple rules lead to the formation of a bistable switch on the level of the group that allows the distinction between recruitment and random noise in the nest. A consequence of the mechanism we propose is a negative effect of ant density on exit rates and recruitment success. This is, indeed, confirmed by our measurements.
AB - We study how desert ants, Cataglyphis niger, a species that lacks pheromonebased recruitment mechanisms, inform each other about the presence of food. Our results are based on automated tracking that allows us to collect a large database of ant trajectories and interactions. We find that interactions affect an ant's speed within the nest. Fast ants tend to slow down, whereas slow ones increase their speed when encountering a faster ant. Faster ants tend to exit the nest more frequently than slower ones. So, if an ant gains enough speed through encounters with others, then she tends to leave the nest and look for food. On the other hand, we find that the probability for her to leave the nest depends only on her speed, but not on whether she had recently interacted with a recruiter that has found the food. This suggests a recruitment system in which ants communicate their state by very simple interactions. Based on this assumption, we estimate the information-theoretical channel capacity of the ants' pairwise interactions. We find that the response to the speed of an interacting nest-mate is very noisy. The question is then how random interactions with ants within the nest can be distinguished from those interactions with a recruiter who has found food. Our measurements and model suggest that this distinction does not depend on reliable communication but on behavioural differences between ants that have found the food and those that have not. Recruiters retain high speeds throughout the experiment, regardless of the ants they interact with; non-recruiters communicate with a limited number of nestmates and adjust their speed following these interactions. These simple rules lead to the formation of a bistable switch on the level of the group that allows the distinction between recruitment and random noise in the nest. A consequence of the mechanism we propose is a negative effect of ant density on exit rates and recruitment success. This is, indeed, confirmed by our measurements.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84881272451&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1098/rsif.2013.0079
DO - 10.1098/rsif.2013.0079
M3 - مقالة
SN - 1742-5689
VL - 10
JO - Journal of the Royal Society Interface
JF - Journal of the Royal Society Interface
IS - 82
M1 - 20130079
ER -