Abstract

This study analyses some aspects of the role of alloethism in the networks of patrolling workers of a polymorphic ant species (Tapinoma nigerrimum) in the nest surroundings. We focus on the analysis of movement and distribution patterns of different-sized individuals, and their relationship to the potential transfer of information between each other via contacts during patrolling activities. Our results suggest that small workers are potentially more efficient in these kind of activities (information discovery and transfer), because they contact each other more than could be expected by a random process based on their proportions and, also, because their deduced energetic expenditure per unit of information found or transferred is lower than that of large workers. These differences in the contacts between patrolling ants for small and large workers cannot be explained by their movement patterns (velocity, time spend in movement, turning angles), which do not differ between both groups but, rather, seem to be a consequence of their resulting distribution patterns (overdispersed for large ants and random for small ones).

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