Interactions with combined chemical cues inform harvester ant foragers' decisions to leave the nest in search of food.

Social insect colonies operate without central control or any global assessment of what needs to be done by workers. Colony organization arises from the responses of individuals to local cues. Red harvester ants (Pogonomyrmex barbatus) regulate foraging using interactions between returning and outgo...

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Main Authors: Michael J Greene, Noa Pinter-Wollman, Deborah M Gordon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3540075?pdf=render
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author Michael J Greene
Noa Pinter-Wollman
Deborah M Gordon
author_facet Michael J Greene
Noa Pinter-Wollman
Deborah M Gordon
author_sort Michael J Greene
collection DOAJ
description Social insect colonies operate without central control or any global assessment of what needs to be done by workers. Colony organization arises from the responses of individuals to local cues. Red harvester ants (Pogonomyrmex barbatus) regulate foraging using interactions between returning and outgoing foragers. The rate at which foragers return with seeds, a measure of food availability, sets the rate at which outgoing foragers leave the nest on foraging trips. We used mimics to test whether outgoing foragers inside the nest respond to the odor of food, oleic acid, the odor of the forager itself, cuticular hydrocarbons, or a combination of both with increased foraging activity. We compared foraging activity, the rate at which foragers passed a line on a trail, before and after the addition of mimics. The combination of both odors, those of food and of foragers, is required to stimulate foraging. The addition of blank mimics, mimics coated with food odor alone, or mimics coated with forager odor alone did not increase foraging activity. We compared the rates at which foragers inside the nest interacted with other ants, blank mimics, and mimics coated with a combination of food and forager odor. Foragers inside the nest interacted more with mimics coated with combined forager/seed odors than with blank mimics, and these interactions had the same effect as those with other foragers. Outgoing foragers inside the nest entrance are stimulated to leave the nest in search of food by interacting with foragers returning with seeds. By using the combined odors of forager cuticular hydrocarbons and of seeds, the colony captures precise information, on the timescale of seconds, about the current availability of food.
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spelling doaj.art-02180f7a46664b28b3128aad6aabf0f32022-12-22T01:03:56ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0181e5221910.1371/journal.pone.0052219Interactions with combined chemical cues inform harvester ant foragers' decisions to leave the nest in search of food.Michael J GreeneNoa Pinter-WollmanDeborah M GordonSocial insect colonies operate without central control or any global assessment of what needs to be done by workers. Colony organization arises from the responses of individuals to local cues. Red harvester ants (Pogonomyrmex barbatus) regulate foraging using interactions between returning and outgoing foragers. The rate at which foragers return with seeds, a measure of food availability, sets the rate at which outgoing foragers leave the nest on foraging trips. We used mimics to test whether outgoing foragers inside the nest respond to the odor of food, oleic acid, the odor of the forager itself, cuticular hydrocarbons, or a combination of both with increased foraging activity. We compared foraging activity, the rate at which foragers passed a line on a trail, before and after the addition of mimics. The combination of both odors, those of food and of foragers, is required to stimulate foraging. The addition of blank mimics, mimics coated with food odor alone, or mimics coated with forager odor alone did not increase foraging activity. We compared the rates at which foragers inside the nest interacted with other ants, blank mimics, and mimics coated with a combination of food and forager odor. Foragers inside the nest interacted more with mimics coated with combined forager/seed odors than with blank mimics, and these interactions had the same effect as those with other foragers. Outgoing foragers inside the nest entrance are stimulated to leave the nest in search of food by interacting with foragers returning with seeds. By using the combined odors of forager cuticular hydrocarbons and of seeds, the colony captures precise information, on the timescale of seconds, about the current availability of food.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3540075?pdf=render
spellingShingle Michael J Greene
Noa Pinter-Wollman
Deborah M Gordon
Interactions with combined chemical cues inform harvester ant foragers' decisions to leave the nest in search of food.
PLoS ONE
title Interactions with combined chemical cues inform harvester ant foragers' decisions to leave the nest in search of food.
title_full Interactions with combined chemical cues inform harvester ant foragers' decisions to leave the nest in search of food.
title_fullStr Interactions with combined chemical cues inform harvester ant foragers' decisions to leave the nest in search of food.
title_full_unstemmed Interactions with combined chemical cues inform harvester ant foragers' decisions to leave the nest in search of food.
title_short Interactions with combined chemical cues inform harvester ant foragers' decisions to leave the nest in search of food.
title_sort interactions with combined chemical cues inform harvester ant foragers decisions to leave the nest in search of food
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3540075?pdf=render
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