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Aggregation is a fundamental principle of animal behavior; it is especially significant tohighly social species, like ants. Ants typically aggregate their workers and brood in a central nest, potentially due to advantages in colony defense and regulation of the environment. In many ant species, when a colony must abandon its

Aggregation is a fundamental principle of animal behavior; it is especially significant tohighly social species, like ants. Ants typically aggregate their workers and brood in a central nest, potentially due to advantages in colony defense and regulation of the environment. In many ant species, when a colony must abandon its nest, it can effectively reach consensus on a new home. Ants of the genus Temnothorax have become a model for this collective decision-making process, and for decentralized cognition more broadly. Previous studies examine emigration by well-aggregated colonies, but can these ants also reach consensus when the colony has been scattered? Such scattering may readily occur in nature if the nest is disturbed by natural or man- made disasters. In this exploratory study, Temnothorax rugatulus colonies were randomly scattered in an arena and presented with a binary equal choice of nest sites. Findings concluded that the colonies were able to re-coalesce, however consensus is more difficult than for aggregated colonies and involved an additional primary phase of multiple temporary aggregations eventually yielding to reunification. The maximum percent of colony utilization for these aggregates was reached within the first hour, after which point, consensus tended to rise as aggregation decreased. Small, but frequent, aggregates formed within the first twenty minutes and remained and dissolved to the nest by varying processes. Each colony included a clump containing the queen, with the majority of aggregates containing at least one brood item. These findings provide additional insight to house-hunting experiments in more naturally challenging circumstances, as well as aggregation within Temnothorax colonies.
ContributorsGoodland, Brooke (Author) / Shaffer, Zachary (Thesis advisor) / Pratt, Stephen (Thesis advisor) / Pavlic, Theodore (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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The coordination of group behavior in the social insects is representative of a broader phenomenon in nature, emergent biological complexity. In such systems, it is believed that large-scale patterns result from the interaction of relatively simple subunits. This dissertation involved the study of one such system: the social foraging of

The coordination of group behavior in the social insects is representative of a broader phenomenon in nature, emergent biological complexity. In such systems, it is believed that large-scale patterns result from the interaction of relatively simple subunits. This dissertation involved the study of one such system: the social foraging of the ant Temnothorax rugatulus. Physically tiny with small population sizes, these cavity-dwelling ants provide a good model system to explore the mechanisms and ultimate origins of collective behavior in insect societies. My studies showed that colonies robustly exploit sugar water. Given a choice between feeders unequal in quality, colonies allocate more foragers to the better feeder. If the feeders change in quality, colonies are able to reallocate their foragers to the new location of the better feeder. These qualities of flexibility and allocation could be explained by the nature of positive feedback (tandem run recruitment) that these ants use. By observing foraging colonies with paint-marked ants, I was able to determine the `rules' that individuals follow: foragers recruit more and give up less when they find a better food source. By altering the nutritional condition of colonies, I found that these rules are flexible - attuned to the colony state. In starved colonies, individual ants are more likely to explore and recruit to food sources than in well-fed colonies. Similar to honeybees, Temmnothorax foragers appear to modulate their exploitation and recruitment behavior in response to environmental and social cues. Finally, I explored the influence of ecology (resource distribution) on the foraging success of colonies. Larger colonies showed increased consistency and a greater rate of harvest than smaller colonies, but this advantage was mediated by the distribution of resources. While patchy or rare food sources exaggerated the relative success of large colonies, regularly (or easily found) distributions leveled the playing field for smaller colonies. Social foraging in ant societies can best be understood when we view the colony as a single organism and the phenotype - group size, communication, and individual behavior - as integrated components of a homeostatic unit.
ContributorsShaffer, Zachary (Author) / Pratt, Stephen C (Thesis advisor) / Hölldobler, Bert (Committee member) / Janssen, Marco (Committee member) / Fewell, Jennifer (Committee member) / Liebig, Juergen (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2014