Sting, Carry and Stock: How Corpse Availability Can Regulate De-Centralized Task Allocation in a Ponerine Ant Colony
Authored by Istvan Karsai, Thomas Schmickl
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0114611
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Platforms:
Vensim
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Abstract
We develop a model to produce plausible patterns of task partitioning in
the ponerine ant Ectatomma ruidum based on the availability of living
prey and prey corpses. The model is based on the organizational
capabilities of a ``common stomach'' through which the colony utilizes
the availability of a natural (food) substance as a major communication
channel to regulate the income and expenditure of the very same
substance. This communication channel has also a central role in
regulating task partitioning of collective hunting behavior in a supply
\& demand-driven manner. Our model shows that task partitioning of the
collective hunting behavior in E. ruidum can be explained by regulation
due to a common stomach system. The saturation of the common stomach
provides accessible information to individual ants so that they can
adjust their hunting behavior accordingly by engaging in or by
abandoning from stinging or transporting tasks. The common stomach is
able to establish and to keep stabilized an effective mix of workforce
to exploit the prey population and to transport food into the nest. This
system is also able to react to external perturbations in a
de-centralized homeostatic way, such as to changes in the prey density
or to accumulation of food in the nest. In case of stable conditions the
system develops towards an equilibrium concerning colony size and prey
density. Our model shows that organization of work through a common
stomach system can allow Ectatomma ruidum to collectively forage for
food in a robust, reactive and reliable way. The model is compared to
previously published models that followed a different modeling approach.
Based on our model analysis we also suggest a series of experiments for
which our model gives plausible predictions. These predictions are used
to formulate a set of testable hypotheses that should be investigated
empirically in future experimentation.
Tags
Individual-based model
self-organization
Response thresholds
Common stomach
Division-of-labor
Honey-bees
Nest construction behavior
Apis-mellifera l.
Ectatomma-ruidum
Insect societies