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R Soc Open Sci


Title:Multiple nest entrances alter foraging and information transfer in ants
Author(s):Lehue M; Collignon B; Detrain C;
Address:"Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Bruxelles, Belgium. Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland"
Journal Title:R Soc Open Sci
Year:2020
Volume:20200226
Issue:2
Page Number:191330 -
DOI: 10.1098/rsos.191330
ISSN/ISBN:2054-5703 (Print) 2054-5703 (Electronic) 2054-5703 (Linking)
Abstract:"The ecological success of ants relies on their ability to discover and collectively exploit available resources. In this process, the nest entrances are key locations at which foragers transfer food and information about the surrounding environment. We assume that the number of nest entrances regulates social exchanges between foragers and inner-nest workers, and hence influences the foraging efficiency of the whole colony. Here, we compared the foraging responses of Myrmica rubra colonies settled in either one-entrance or two-entrance nests. The total outflows of workers exploiting a sucrose food source were similar regardless of the number of nest entrances. However, in the two-entrance nests, the launching of recruitment was delayed, a pheromone trail was less likely to emerge between the nest and the food source, and recruits were less likely to reach the food target. As a result, an additional entrance through which information could transit decreased the efficiency of social foraging and ultimately led to a lower amount of retrieved food. Our study confirms the key-role of nest entrances in the transfer of information from foragers to potential recruits. The influence of the number of entrances on the emergence of a collective trail also highlights the spatially extended impact of the nest architecture that can shape foraging patterns outside the nest"
Keywords:ants collective behaviour foraging nest entrance recruitment trail;
Notes:"PubMed-not-MEDLINELehue, Marine Collignon, Bertrand Detrain, Claire eng England 2020/04/08 R Soc Open Sci. 2020 Feb 26; 7(2):191330. doi: 10.1098/rsos.191330. eCollection 2020 Feb"

 
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