Benefits of Dispersed Central-Place Foraging: An Individual-Based Model of a Polydomous Ant Colony
Authored by Amelie Schmolke
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.1086/598493
Sponsors:
German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Colonies of many ant species are not confined to a single nest but
inhabit several dispersed nests, a colony organization referred to as
polydomy. The benefits of polydomy are not well understood. It has been
proposed that increased foraging efficiency promotes polydomy. In a
spatially explicit individual-based model, I compare the foraging
success of monodomous and polydomous colonies in environments with
varying food distributions. Multiple nests increased the colony's
foraging success if food sources were randomly scattered in the
environment. Monodomous and polydomous colonies did not differ in
foraging success if food sources were clustered in one or three
locations. These results support the hypothesis that foraging success
serves as a driver for polydomous colony organization. Because transport
may occur between the dispersed nests of a polydomous colony, I tested
the efficiency of a simple mechanism of food exchange between nests.
This mechanism, as introduced previously in the literature, proves
insufficient to equalize the level of food between nests. While the
importance of transport between nests remains unclear, the model results
indicate that polydomy may increase the foraging success of ant colonies
and that this effect may be robust across a range of food distributions.
Tags
movement
ecology
patterns
Argentine ant
Hymenoptera
Consequences
Food
Formicidae
Seasonal polydomy
Cataglyphis