A regulação da atividade de forrageamento de colônia de formiga sem informação especial: Anternet???

domingo, agosto 26, 2012

The Regulation of Ant Colony Foraging Activity without Spatial Information

Balaji Prabhakar1, Katherine N. Dektar2, Deborah M. Gordon3*

1 Departments of Computer Science and Electrical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, California, United States of America, 2 Biomedical Computation, School of Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, California, United States of America, 3 Department of Biology, Stanford University, Stanford, California, United States of America



Abstract 

Many dynamical networks, such as the ones that produce the collective behavior of social insects, operate without any central control, instead arising from local interactions among individuals. A well-studied example is the formation of recruitment trails in ant colonies, but many ant species do not use pheromone trails. We present a model of the regulation of foraging by harvester ant (Pogonomyrmex barbatus) colonies. This species forages for scattered seeds that one ant can retrieve on its own, so there is no need for spatial information such as pheromone trails that lead ants to specific locations. Previous work shows that colony foraging activity, the rate at which ants go out to search individually for seeds, is regulated in response to current food availability throughout the colony's foraging area. Ants use the rate of brief antennal contacts inside the nest between foragers returning with food and outgoing foragers available to leave the nest on the next foraging trip. Here we present a feedback-based algorithm that captures the main features of data from field experiments in which the rate of returning foragers was manipulated. The algorithm draws on our finding that the distribution of intervals between successive ants returning to the nest is a Poisson process. We fitted the parameter that estimates the effect of each returning forager on the rate at which outgoing foragers leave the nest. We found that correlations between observed rates of returning foragers and simulated rates of outgoing foragers, using our model, were similar to those in the data. Our simple stochastic model shows how the regulation of ant colony foraging can operate without spatial information, describing a process at the level of individual ants that predicts the overall foraging activity of the colony.

Author Summary

Social insect colonies operate without any central control. Their collective behavior arises from local interactions among individuals. Here we present a simple stochastic model of the regulation of foraging by harvester ant (Pogonomyrmex barbatus) colonies, which forage for scattered seeds that one ant can retrieve on its own, so there is no need for pheromone trails to specific locations. Previous work shows that colony foraging activity is regulated in response to current food availability, using the rate of brief antennal contacts inside the nest between foragers returning with food and outgoing foragers. Our feedback-based algorithm estimates the effect of each returning forager on the rate at which foragers leave the nest. The model shows how the regulation of ant colony foraging can operate without spatial information, describing a process at the level of individual ants that predicts the overall foraging activity of the colony.

Citation: Prabhakar B, Dektar KN, Gordon DM (2012) The Regulation of Ant Colony Foraging Activity without Spatial Information. PLoS Comput Biol 8(8): e1002670. doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002670

Editor: Iain D. Couzin, Princeton University, United States of America

Received: January 23, 2012; Accepted: July 15, 2012; Published: August 23, 2012

Copyright: © 2012 Prabhakar et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

Funding: The work was funded by NSF grant IOS-0718631 to D.M.G, and by a grant from the CleanSlate program at Stanford University to B.P. and D.M.G. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

Competing interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

* E-mail: dmgordon@stanford.edu

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