Literature DB >> 29166159

Local Regulation of Trail Networks of the Arboreal Turtle Ant, Cephalotes goniodontus.

Deborah M Gordon.   

Abstract

This study examines how an arboreal ant colony maintains, extends, and repairs its network of foraging trails and nests, built on a network of vegetation. Nodes are junctions where a branch forks off from another or where a branch of one plant touching another provides a new edge on which ants could travel. The ants' choice of edge at a node appears to be reinforced by trail pheromone. Ongoing pruning of the network tends to eliminate cycles and minimize the number of nodes and thus decision points, but not the distance traveled. At junctions, trails tend to stay on the same plant. In combination with the long internode lengths of the branches of vines in the tropical dry forest, this facilitates travel to food sources at the canopy edge. Exploration, when ants leave the trail on an edge that is not being used, makes both search and repair possible. The fewer the junctions between a location and the main trail, the more likely the ants are to arrive there. Ruptured trails are rapidly repaired with a new path, apparently using breadth-first search. The regulation of the network promotes its resilience and continuity.

Entities:  

Keywords:  infrastructure; network topology; polydomous ants; resilience

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29166159     DOI: 10.1086/693418

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am Nat        ISSN: 0003-0147            Impact factor:   3.926


  5 in total

1.  Measuring collective behavior: an ecological approach.

Authors:  Deborah M Gordon
Journal:  Theory Biosci       Date:  2019-09-26       Impact factor: 1.919

2.  Ant-plant sociometry in the Azteca-Cecropia mutualism.

Authors:  Peter R Marting; Nicole M Kallman; William T Wcislo; Stephen C Pratt
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-12-19       Impact factor: 4.379

3.  A distributed algorithm to maintain and repair the trail networks of arboreal ants.

Authors:  Arjun Chandrasekhar; Deborah M Gordon; Saket Navlakha
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-06-18       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 4.  Distributed Adaptive Search in T Cells: Lessons From Ants.

Authors:  Melanie E Moses; Judy L Cannon; Deborah M Gordon; Stephanie Forrest
Journal:  Front Immunol       Date:  2019-06-13       Impact factor: 7.561

5.  Better tired than lost: Turtle ant trail networks favor coherence over short edges.

Authors:  Arjun Chandrasekhar; James A R Marshall; Cortnea Austin; Saket Navlakha; Deborah M Gordon
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2021-10-21       Impact factor: 4.475

  5 in total

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