Abstract

Collective foraging has been shown to benefit organisms in environments where food is patchily distributed, but whether this is true in the case where organisms do not rely on long-range communications to coordinate their collective behaviour has been understudied. To address this question, we use the tractable laboratory model organism Caenorhabditis elegans, where a social strain (npr-1 mutant) and a solitary strain (N2) are available for direct comparison of foraging strategies. We first developed an on-lattice minimal model for comparing collective and solitary foraging strategies, finding that social agents benefit from feeding faster and more efficiently simply owing to group formation. Our laboratory foraging experiments with npr-1 and N2 worm populations, however, show an advantage for solitary N2 in all food distribution environments that we tested. We incorporated additional strain-specific behavioural parameters of npr-1 and N2 worms into our model and computationally identified N2's higher feeding rate to be the key factor underlying its advantage, without which it is possible to recapitulate the advantage of collective foraging in patchy environments. Our work highlights the theoretical advantage of collective foraging owing to group formation alone without long-range interactions and the valuable role of modelling to guide experiments. This article is part of the theme issue 'Multi-scale analysis and modelling of collective migration in biological systems'.

Highlights

  • Collective behaviour is displayed in many animal species including swarming insects, schooling fish, flocking birds, and troops of mammals [1,2,3,4]

  • Collective foraging is beneficial in patchy food distribution environments in the minimal model

  • Collective foraging may be beneficial for organisms in environments with patchy food distributions, but whether this applies to organisms only relying on short-range communications to coordinate their collective behaviour has been unclear

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Summary

Introduction

Collective behaviour is displayed in many animal species including swarming insects, schooling fish, flocking birds, and troops of mammals [1,2,3,4]. While long-range interactions may apply to animals with good visual or acoustic senses [10, 11], this type of interaction may be less relevant for smaller mesoscopic animals with limited sensory modalities, including nematodes (roundworms), which are known to swarm [12] but whose collective foraging we know little about. Direct comparison between model predictions and experimental data is often limited by uncontrolled natural environments that the animals live in [13]. Experimental accessibility of C. elegans under controlled laboratory conditions further facilitates comparison with modelling outcomes

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