| Literature DB >> 26529291 |
Abstract
Ants create nests of a size that is tailored to the number of individuals in a nest via a self-organized process. It is not yet clear how they accomplish this. Deposition and evaporation of pheromones at the digging face has been hypothesised by Deneubourg and Franks (1995) and Buhl et al. (2005) to be part of the nest construction process, with models being presented to support this contention. This hypothesis was tested by allowing groups of 5 Acromyrmex lundi workers to choose between two excavation sites, one that was freshly exposed to digging and one where digging had ceased an hour previously. It was expected that if pheromones played a role in stimulating digging, then ants would show a preference for digging in the "fresh" sites rather than the "aged" sites where the putative digging pheromone had decayed. No significant difference in digging activity between "fresh" and "aged" sites was detected. It is therefore likely that, while digging pheromones may play other roles in other parts of the digging system, they do not play an important role in regulation of soil excavation at the digging face.Entities:
Keywords: Acromyrmex lundi; Digging regulation; Nest construction; Pheromone; Self-organisation
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26529291 DOI: 10.1016/j.beproc.2015.10.021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Processes ISSN: 0376-6357 Impact factor: 1.777