Ants Can Learn to Forage on One-Way Trails


Autoria(s): RIBEIRO, Pedro Leite; HELENE, Andre Frazao; XAVIER, Gilberto; NAVAS, Carlos; RIBEIRO, Fernando Leite
Contribuinte(s)

UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO

Data(s)

18/04/2012

18/04/2012

2009

Resumo

The trails formed by many ant species between nest and food source are two-way roads on which outgoing and returning workers meet and touch each other all along. The way to get back home, after grasping a food load, is to take the same route on which they have arrived from the nest. In many species such trails are chemically marked by pheromones providing orientation cues for the ants to find their way. Other species rely on their vision and use landmarks as cues. We have developed a method to stop foraging ants from shuttling on two-way trails. The only way to forage is to take two separate roads, as they cannot go back on their steps after arriving at the food or at the nest. The condition qualifies as a problem because all their orientation cues-chemical, visual or any other - are disrupted, as all of them cannot but lead the ants back to the route on which they arrived. We have found that workers of the leaf-cutting ant Atta sexdens rubropilosa can solve the problem. They could not only find the alternative way, but also used the unidirectional traffic system to forage effectively. We suggest that their ability is an evolutionary consequence of the need to deal with environmental irregularities that cannot be negotiated by means of excessively stereotyped behavior, and that it is but an example of a widespread phenomenon. We also suggest that our method can be adapted to other species, invertebrate and vertebrate, in the study of orientation, memory, perception, learning and communication.

CNPq Brazilian National Counsel of Technological and Scientific Development

Identificador

PLOS ONE, v.4, n.4, 2009

1932-6203

http://producao.usp.br/handle/BDPI/15763

10.1371/journal.pone.0005024

http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0005024

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE

Relação

Plos One

Direitos

openAccess

Copyright PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE

Palavras-Chave #LASIUS-NIGER #FOOD RECRUITMENT #DECISION-MAKING #ATTA-CEPHALOTES #ARGENTINE ANT #CUTTING ANT #DESERT ANTS #ORIENTATION #FORMICIDAE #HYMENOPTERA #Biology #Multidisciplinary Sciences
Tipo

article

original article

publishedVersion