Literature DB >> 15607683

Idiosyncratic route-based memories in desert ants, Melophorus bagoti: how do they interact with path-integration vectors?

Martin Kohler1, Rüdiger Wehner.   

Abstract

Individually foraging desert ants of central Australia, Melophorus bagoti, exhibit amazingly precise mechanisms of visual landmark guidance when navigating through cluttered environments. If trained to shuttle back and forth between the nest and a feeder, they establish habitual outbound and inbound routes, which guide them idiosyncratically across the natural maze of extended arrays of grass tussocks covering their foraging areas. The route-based memories that usually differ between outbound and inbound runs are acquired already during the first runs to the nest and feeder. If the ants are displaced sideways of their habitual routes, they can enter their stereotyped routes at any place and then follow these routes with the same accuracy as if they had started at the usual point of departure. Furthermore, the accuracy of maintaining a route does not depend on whether homebound ants have been captured at the feeder shortly before starting their home run and, hence, with their home vector still fully available (full-vector ants), or whether they have been captured at the nest after they had already completed their home run (zero-vector ants). Hence, individual landmark memories can be retrieved independently of the state of the path-integration vector with which they have been associated during the acquisition phase of learning. However, the ants display their path-integration vector when displaced from the feeder to unfamiliar territory.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15607683     DOI: 10.1016/j.nlm.2004.05.011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurobiol Learn Mem        ISSN: 1074-7427            Impact factor:   2.877


  65 in total

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6.  Mapping the navigational knowledge of individually foraging ants, Myrmecia croslandi.

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7.  The night-time temporal window of locomotor activity in the Namib Desert long-distance wandering spider, Leucorchestris arenicola.

Authors:  Thomas Nørgaard; Joh R Henschel; Rüdiger Wehner
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8.  Ant navigation en route to the goal: signature routes facilitate way-finding of Gigantiops destructor.

Authors:  D Macquart; L Garnier; M Combe; G Beugnon
Journal:  J Comp Physiol A Neuroethol Sens Neural Behav Physiol       Date:  2005-10-21       Impact factor: 1.836

9.  Views, landmarks, and routes: how do desert ants negotiate an obstacle course?

Authors:  Antoine Wystrach; Sebastian Schwarz; Patrick Schultheiss; Guy Beugnon; Ken Cheng
Journal:  J Comp Physiol A Neuroethol Sens Neural Behav Physiol       Date:  2010-10-23       Impact factor: 1.836

10.  Multiroute memories in desert ants.

Authors:  Stefan Sommer; Christoph von Beeren; Rüdiger Wehner
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2007-12-26       Impact factor: 11.205

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