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Ants can sort their brood without a gaseous template

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Abstract

A fundamental issue of collective intelligence is whether the collective pattern or process is based on environmental information that explicitly codes for it or arises through self-organization of the individuals. Sometimes, these alternatives occur together. Adaptive systems may also be capable of utilizing different types of mechanism under different conditions. Sendova-Franks et al. (Anim Behav 68:1095–1106, 2004) demonstrated evidence for a self-organization mechanism of brood sorting in the ant Temnothorax albipennis, where the brood are sorted in a series of bands or concentric annuli that increase in size with distance from the colony centre. The work by Cox and Blanchard (J Theor Biol 204:223-238, 2000) suggests an alternative or complementary mechanism whereby the brood pattern is specified by the template of a CO2 gradient. Here, we test for a gaseous template as a necessary condition for brood sorting. Under the experimental condition, we pumped the air out of the nest continuously to prevent the accumulation of any gaseous substances. We compared the brood pattern between the experimental and control conditions according to four characteristics: mean distance from centre, mean nearest-neighbour distance, shape and area. Under the experimental condition, the order of brood types according to the first two characteristics was the same as in the control. The area of the brood pattern was smaller, and its shape elongated under the experimental condition. As expected on the basis of these differences, mean distance from centre was greater and mean nearest-neighbour distance was smaller under the experimental condition (although not statistically significantly) and by the expected amount. We found evidence that ants avoid placing brood in the strongest airflow stream. This could explain the reduced area and elongated shape of the brood pattern under the experimental condition. We conclude that a gaseous template is not a necessary condition for brood sorting.

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Acknowledgements

We thank Antony Alexiev, Anna Dornhaus, Nigel Franks, Elizabeth Langridge, Francois-Xavier Dechaume Moncharmont and Tom Richardson for helpful suggestions and discussions. ASF, SS and CM gratefully acknowledge the EPSRC for support. All experiments carried out in this study comply with the current law in the UK.

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Correspondence to Ana B. Sendova-Franks.

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Communicated by K. Ross

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Scholes, S.R., Sendova-Franks, A.B., Swift, S.T. et al. Ants can sort their brood without a gaseous template. Behav Ecol Sociobiol 59, 531–540 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00265-005-0078-8

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