Literature DB >> 10887903

Gaseous templates in ant nests.

M D Cox1, G B Blanchard.   

Abstract

We apply a diffusion model to the atmosphere of ant nests. With particular reference to carbon dioxide (CO2), we explore analytically and numerically the spatial and temporal patterns of brood- or worker-produced gases in nests. The maximum concentration within a typical one-chamber ant nest with approximately 200 ants can reach 12.5 times atmospheric concentration, reaching 95% of equilibrium concentrations within 15 min. Maximum concentration increases with increasing number of ants in the nest (or production rate of the gas), distance between the centre of the nest ants and the nest entrance, entrance length, wall thickness, and with decreasing entrance width, wall permeability and diffusion coefficient. The nest can be divided into three qualitatively distinct regions according to the shape of the gradient: a plateau of high concentration in the back half of the nest; an intermediate region of increasingly steep gradient towards the entrance; and a steep linear gradient in the entrance tunnel. These regions are robust to changes in gas concentrations, but vary with changes in nest architecture. The pattern of diffusing gases contains information about position and orientation relative to gas sources and sinks, and about colony state, including colony size, activity state and aspects of nest architecture. We discuss how this diffusion pattern may act as a "dynamic template", providing local cues which trigger behavioural acts appropriate to colony needs, which in turn may feed back to changes in the gas template. In particular, wall building occurs along lines of similar concentration for a variety of nest geometries; there is surprising convergence between the period of cycles of synchronously active ants and the time taken for CO2 levels to equilibrate; and the qualitatively distinct regions of the "dynamic template" correspond to regions occupied by different groups of ants.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10887903     DOI: 10.1006/jtbi.2000.2010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Theor Biol        ISSN: 0022-5193            Impact factor:   2.691


  12 in total

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5.  The nest architecture of three species of north Florida Aphaenogaster ants.

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6.  Short-term activity cycles impede information transmission in ant colonies.

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7.  Florida harvester ant nest architecture, nest relocation and soil carbon dioxide gradients.

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9.  Feeding and stocking up: radio-labelled food reveals exchange patterns in ants.

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10.  Can we identify general architectural principles that impact the collective behaviour of both human and animal systems?

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Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2018-08-19       Impact factor: 6.237

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