Abstract

During foraging, ant workers are known to make use of multiple information sources, such as private information (personal memory) and social information (trail pheromones). Environmental effects on foraging, and how these interact with other information sources, have, however, been little studied. One environmental effect is trail bifurcation asymmetry. Ants forage on branching trail networks and must often decide which branch to take at a junction (bifurcation). This is an important decision, as finding food sources relies on making the correct choices at bifurcations. Bifurcation angle may provide important information when making this choice. We used a Y-maze with a pivoting 90° bifurcation to study trail choice of Lasius niger foragers at varying branch asymmetries (0°, [both branches 45° from straight ahead], 30° [branches at 30° and 60° from straight ahead], 45°, 60° and 90° [one branch straight ahead, the other at 90°]). The experiment was carried out either with equal amounts of trail pheromone on both branches of the bifurcation or with pheromone present on only one branch. Our results show that with equal pheromone, trail asymmetry has a significant effect on trail choice. Ants preferentially follow the branch deviating least from straight, and this effect increases as asymmetry increases (47% at 0°, 54% at 30°, 57% at 45°, 66% at 60° and 73% at 90°). However, when pheromone is only present on one branch, the graded effect of asymmetry disappears. Overall, however, there is an effect of asymmetry as the preference of ants for the pheromone-marked branch over the unmarked branch is reduced from 65%, when it is the less deviating branch, to 53%, when it is the more deviating branch. These results demonstrate that trail asymmetry influences ant decision-making at bifurcations and that this information interacts with trail pheromone presence in a non-hierarchical manner.

Highlights

  • Ants are central place foragers, and an individual worker can potentially use multiple sources of information when travelling between the nest and a feeding site

  • These results demonstrate that trail asymmetry influences ant decisionmaking at bifurcations and that this information interacts with trail pheromone presence in a non-hierarchical manner

  • The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of varying branch asymmetry at a 90° bifurcation on trail choice by L. niger foragers and how this is influenced by the presence of trail pheromone on either the more or less deviating branch

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Summary

Introduction

Ants are central place foragers, and an individual worker can potentially use multiple sources of information when travelling between the nest and a feeding site. Two well-studied types of information are available to foragers: private information, memory, and social information, such as pheromone trails and home-range markings (Devigne et al 2004; Czaczkes et al 2011; Gru€ter et al 2011). Individuals may use both social and private information to help them navigate the trail system (Gru€ter et al 2011; Czaczkes et al 2013a). Information may be in the form of incidental cues, such as the density of other ants on the trail, or the presence of passively deposited home-range markings (Burd & Aranwela 2003; Devigne et al 2004; Czaczkes et al 2013b).

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