• DocumentCode
    2307082
  • Title

    How ants turn information into food

  • Author

    Flanagan, Tatiana Paz ; Letendre, Kenneth ; Burnside, William ; Fricke, G. Matthew ; Moses, Melanie

  • Author_Institution
    Univ. of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, USA
  • fYear
    2011
  • fDate
    11-15 April 2011
  • Firstpage
    178
  • Lastpage
    185
  • Abstract
    Organisms that can more effectively exploit information about their environments to improve foraging success have a competitive and selective advantage over others. Thus, animals are expected to evolve strategies that use information to improve foraging success. We study how desert seed harvesters use information to improve the rate they collect seeds, which contributes to the colony´s fitness. Through field studies and computer simulations, we manipulated the information available to the ants in the spatial distribution of seeds and measured the resulting foraging rates. In field observations, seeds were collected faster when seeds could be found with less information. The increase in foraging rate with clustering was indistinguishable across three related species that vary over an order of magnitude in colony size. Computer simulations show similar systematic increases in foraging rates when information about the food location is communicated among nestmates.
  • Keywords
    artificial life; ecology; ant behavior; ant colony size; desert seed harvester; food location; foraging success improvement; spatial distribution; Computational modeling; Entropy; Genetic algorithms; Image color analysis; Measurement; Recruitment; Turning; ant behavior; ants; foraging; information; modeling;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Artificial Life (ALIFE), 2011 IEEE Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    Paris
  • ISSN
    2160-6374
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-61284-062-8
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ALIFE.2011.5954650
  • Filename
    5954650