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Searching behaviour of desert ants, genusCataglyphis (Formicidae, Hymenoptera)

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Summary

  1. 1.

    If a homing ant (Cataglyphis bicolor,C. albicans) gets lost, it does not perform a random walk but adopts a stereotyped search strategy. During its search the ant performs a number of loops of ever-increasing size, starting and ending at the origin and pointing at different azimuthal directions. This strategy ensures that the centre area where the nest is most likely to be, is investigated most extensively.

  2. 2.

    After one hour of continuous search the ant's search paths cover an area of about 104 m2. Nevertheless, the system of loops performed during this time is precisely centred around the origin. The ant's searching density does not depend on the azimuthal direction around the origin but only on the distance from the origin. It rapidly decreases with increasing distance.

  3. 3.

    The ant's searching pattern can be characterized by two functions: thed/t-function correlating distance (d) with time (t), and theα/t-function correlating azimuthal direction (α) with time. If fixes of the ant's position are taken every 10 s, the vectors pointing from the origin to successive fixes change their lengthsd systematically (α/t-function) and their directionsα randomly (α/t-function). What is especially characteristic of the ant's searching pattern is the oscillatingd/t-function which clearly demonstrates that the searching ant repeatedly returns to the origin, even after it has walked, within one hour, along a search trajectory of more than 1 km (the latter number refers toC. albicans-A). The ant's walking speed does not change within a search time of 1 h.

  4. 4.

    The distribution of changes in direction between successive segments of a search path,β, is usually unimodal with a mean of 0°, if complete search paths are considered. Nevertheless, within smaller periods of time, especially during the initial portions of the search the integrated angleβ may continuously change in the same direction. Such portions of the search crudely resemble a spiral which alternately expands and contracts.

  5. 5.

    Although all 3 species ofCataglyphis studied in this paper adopt the same general search strategy, there are some differences in the fine structure of the search:C. albicans-A departs further from the origin than any other species, and performs the most rapid turns. The tendency towards spiralling is most pronounced inC. albicans-B.

  6. 6.

    An efficient searching strategy is formulated, based on purely theoretical grounds. It is assumed that when the search begins the probability density function (PDF) for the location of the nest is Gaussian in two dimensions (a priori PDF). It is further assumed that the ant can never becompletely certain that a given area has been fully explored, so that it is only theprobability of encountering the nest within a certain region that decreases as the time spent in searching this region increases. Thus, the most promising region to search is specified by an a posteriori PDF which takes the ant's past performance into account.

  7. 7.

    A computer model is presented that searches in optimum fashion, as proposed above. In the model, motion of the ant is characterized in terms of radial and tangential components, with the tangential component varying randomly and the radial component varying according to the a posteriori PDF. The model successfully describes what the ants are actually doing (e.g., compare Figs. 17 and 18 with Fig. 3, Figs. 19 and 20 with Figs. 8–10, and Fig. 21a and b with Figs. 4 and 5), indicating that the searching behaviour ofCataglyphis is geared to find the nest as quickly as possible.

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Abbreviations

PDF :

probability density function

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This project has been supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation, grants 3.814.72 and 3.529.75, and the George and Antoine Claraz Foundation, Zürich. We gratefully acknowledge this support which dates back to 1973 when we started to work on the ant's search strategy. The former institution was also generous enough to invite one of us (M.V.S.) for a four weeks stay to the University of Zürich. We also thank K. Fent, who joined our Maharès team in 1978, for recording many search paths ofC. albicans. Finally, however, one of us (R.W.) wants especially to thank his wife for devoting most of her vacation time during the last years to the cataglyphs.

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Wehner, R., Srinivasan, M.V. Searching behaviour of desert ants, genusCataglyphis (Formicidae, Hymenoptera). J. Comp. Physiol. 142, 315–338 (1981). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00605445

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