Task Allocation of Wasps Governed by Common Stomach: A Model Based on Electric Circuits.

Simple regulatory mechanisms based on the idea of the saturable 'common stomach' can control the regulation of construction behavior and colony-level responses to environmental perturbations in Metapolybia wasp societies. We mapped the different task groups to mutual inductance electrical...

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Main Authors: Allison Hilbun, Istvan Karsai
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5115849?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-410e19d8bae5429f928b4981f97e1e5f2020-11-25T01:30:58ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-011111e016704110.1371/journal.pone.0167041Task Allocation of Wasps Governed by Common Stomach: A Model Based on Electric Circuits.Allison HilbunIstvan KarsaiSimple regulatory mechanisms based on the idea of the saturable 'common stomach' can control the regulation of construction behavior and colony-level responses to environmental perturbations in Metapolybia wasp societies. We mapped the different task groups to mutual inductance electrical circuits and used Kirchoff's basic voltage laws to build a model that uses master equations from physics, yet is able to provide strong predictions for this complex biological phenomenon. Similar to real colonies, independently of the initial conditions, the system shortly sets into an equilibrium, which provides optimal task allocation for a steady construction, depending on the influx of accessible water. The system is very flexible and in the case of perturbations, it reallocates its workforce and adapts to the new situation with different equilibrium levels. Similar to the finding of field studies, decreasing any task groups caused decrease of construction; increasing or decreasing water inflow stimulated or reduced the work of other task groups while triggering compensatory behavior in water foragers. We also showed that only well connected circuits are able to produce adequate construction and this agrees with the finding that this type of task partitioning only exists in larger colonies. Studying the buffer properties of the common stomach and its effect on the foragers revealed that it provides stronger negative feedback to the water foragers, while the connection between the pulp foragers and the common stomach has a strong fixed-point attractor, as evidenced by the dissipative trajectory.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5115849?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Allison Hilbun
Istvan Karsai
spellingShingle Allison Hilbun
Istvan Karsai
Task Allocation of Wasps Governed by Common Stomach: A Model Based on Electric Circuits.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Allison Hilbun
Istvan Karsai
author_sort Allison Hilbun
title Task Allocation of Wasps Governed by Common Stomach: A Model Based on Electric Circuits.
title_short Task Allocation of Wasps Governed by Common Stomach: A Model Based on Electric Circuits.
title_full Task Allocation of Wasps Governed by Common Stomach: A Model Based on Electric Circuits.
title_fullStr Task Allocation of Wasps Governed by Common Stomach: A Model Based on Electric Circuits.
title_full_unstemmed Task Allocation of Wasps Governed by Common Stomach: A Model Based on Electric Circuits.
title_sort task allocation of wasps governed by common stomach: a model based on electric circuits.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Simple regulatory mechanisms based on the idea of the saturable 'common stomach' can control the regulation of construction behavior and colony-level responses to environmental perturbations in Metapolybia wasp societies. We mapped the different task groups to mutual inductance electrical circuits and used Kirchoff's basic voltage laws to build a model that uses master equations from physics, yet is able to provide strong predictions for this complex biological phenomenon. Similar to real colonies, independently of the initial conditions, the system shortly sets into an equilibrium, which provides optimal task allocation for a steady construction, depending on the influx of accessible water. The system is very flexible and in the case of perturbations, it reallocates its workforce and adapts to the new situation with different equilibrium levels. Similar to the finding of field studies, decreasing any task groups caused decrease of construction; increasing or decreasing water inflow stimulated or reduced the work of other task groups while triggering compensatory behavior in water foragers. We also showed that only well connected circuits are able to produce adequate construction and this agrees with the finding that this type of task partitioning only exists in larger colonies. Studying the buffer properties of the common stomach and its effect on the foragers revealed that it provides stronger negative feedback to the water foragers, while the connection between the pulp foragers and the common stomach has a strong fixed-point attractor, as evidenced by the dissipative trajectory.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5115849?pdf=render
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