| Literature DB >> 27784955 |
R I'Anson Price1, C Grüter2, W O H Hughes3, S E F Evison4.
Abstract
ABSTRACT: The communication involved in the foraging behaviour of social insects is integral to their success. Many ant species use trail pheromones to make decisions about where to forage. The strong positive feedback caused by the trail pheromone is thought to create a decision between two or more options. When the two options are of identical quality, this is known as symmetry breaking, and is important because it helps colonies to monopolise food sources in a competitive environment. Symmetry breaking is thought to increase with the quantity of pheromone deposited by ants, but empirical studies exploring the factors affecting symmetry breaking are limited. Here, we tested if (i) greater disparity between two food sources increased the degree to which a higher quality food source is favoured and (ii) if the quality of identical food sources would affect the degree of symmetry breaking that occurs. Using the mass-recruiting Pharaoh ant, Monomorium pharaonis, we carried out binary choice tests to investigate how food quality affects the choice and distribution of colony foraging decisions. We found that colonies could coordinate foraging to exploit food sources of greater quality, and a greater contrast in quality between the food sources created a stronger collective decision. Contrary to prediction, we found that symmetry breaking decreased as the quality of two identical food sources increased. We discuss how stochastic effects might lead to relatively strong differences in the amount of pheromone on alternative routes when food source quality is low. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Pheromones used by social insects should guide a colony via positive feedback to distribute colony members at resources in the most adaptive way given the current environment. This study shows that when food resources are of equal quality, Pharaoh ant foragers distribute themselves more evenly if the two food sources are both of high quality compared to if both are of low quality. The results highlight the way in which individual ants can modulate their response to pheromone trails which may lead colonies to exploiting resources more evenly when in a resource rich environment.Entities:
Keywords: Colony organisation; Foraging; Monomorium pharaonis; Symmetry breaking; Trail pheromones
Year: 2016 PMID: 27784955 PMCID: PMC5054046 DOI: 10.1007/s00265-016-2187-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Ecol Sociobiol ISSN: 0340-5443 Impact factor: 2.980
Fig. 1Experimental apparatus used for all bifurcation experiments. Shaded area indicates access area for the ants, which was ~20 cm from the nest box. Feeders are indicated by circles at the end of each branch. Dashed lines indicate the points at which ant traffic counts were made (2.5 cm from bifurcation). Each branch had a width of 15 mm
Fig. 2Experiment 1. a Mean ± s.e. number of ants travelling on a trail to/from medium quality (0.5 M) and low quality (0.1 M) food sources. This was considered to be a low contrast food quality treatment. b Mean ± s.e. ant foraging traffic when high quality (1 M) and low quality (0.1 M) food sources are available. This was considered to be a high contrast food quality treatment. c The proportion (mean ± s.e.) of ant traffic going to the high quality feeder from the low (a) and high (b) contrast treatments. The grey horizontal line signifies an even distribution of traffic between the two branches
Fig. 3Mean ± s.e. number of ants travelling on a trail to/from equal quality feeders: a low quality (0.1 M), b medium quality (0.5 M) and c high quality (1 M) food sources. d The mean ± s.e. proportion of ant traffic on the favoured branch in each of the three identical quality treatments from Experiment 2. The grey horizontal line signifies an even distribution of traffic between the two branches. Each line corresponds to a treatment with either two low quality food sources (0.1 M), two medium quality food sources (0.5 M) or two high quality food sources (1 M)
Fig. 4The number of ants travelling on a trail to/from a feeder (x-axis, Traffic) correlates strongly with the number of ants on each feeder (y-axis, Feeder) during the course of the experiments, whether the food quality is a low quality (0.1 M), b medium quality (0.5 M) or c high quality (1 M), and the slope of the relationship varies dependent on food quality d