How do ants make sense of gravity? A Boltzmann Walker analysis of Lasius niger trajectories on various inclines.

The goal of this study is to describe accurately how the directional information given by support inclinations affects the ant Lasius niger motion in terms of a behavioral decision. To this end, we have tracked the spontaneous motion of 345 ants walking on a 0.5×0.5 m plane canvas, which was tilted...

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Main Authors: Anaïs Khuong, Valentin Lecheval, Richard Fournier, Stéphane Blanco, Sébastian Weitz, Jean-Jacques Bezian, Jacques Gautrais
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3812222?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-efb733409c494e9db62020feac470a282020-11-25T02:33:19ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-01810e7653110.1371/journal.pone.0076531How do ants make sense of gravity? A Boltzmann Walker analysis of Lasius niger trajectories on various inclines.Anaïs KhuongValentin LechevalRichard FournierStéphane BlancoSébastian WeitzJean-Jacques BezianJacques GautraisThe goal of this study is to describe accurately how the directional information given by support inclinations affects the ant Lasius niger motion in terms of a behavioral decision. To this end, we have tracked the spontaneous motion of 345 ants walking on a 0.5×0.5 m plane canvas, which was tilted with 5 various inclinations by [Formula: see text] rad ([Formula: see text] data points). At the population scale, support inclination favors dispersal along uphill and downhill directions. An ant's decision making process is modeled using a version of the Boltzmann Walker model, which describes an ant's random walk as a series of straight segments separated by reorientation events, and was extended to take directional influence into account. From the data segmented accordingly ([Formula: see text] segments), this extension allows us to test separately how average speed, segments lengths and reorientation decisions are affected by support inclination and current walking direction of the ant. We found that support inclination had a major effect on average speed, which appeared approximately three times slower on the [Formula: see text] incline. However, we found no effect of the walking direction on speed. Contrastingly, we found that ants tend to walk longer in the same direction when they move uphill or downhill, and also that they preferentially adopt new uphill or downhill headings at turning points. We conclude that ants continuously adapt their decision making about where to go, and how long to persist in the same direction, depending on how they are aligned with the line of maximum declivity gradient. Hence, their behavioral decision process appears to combine klinokinesis with geomenotaxis. The extended Boltzmann Walker model parameterized by these effects gives a fair account of the directional dispersal of ants on inclines.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3812222?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anaïs Khuong
Valentin Lecheval
Richard Fournier
Stéphane Blanco
Sébastian Weitz
Jean-Jacques Bezian
Jacques Gautrais
spellingShingle Anaïs Khuong
Valentin Lecheval
Richard Fournier
Stéphane Blanco
Sébastian Weitz
Jean-Jacques Bezian
Jacques Gautrais
How do ants make sense of gravity? A Boltzmann Walker analysis of Lasius niger trajectories on various inclines.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Anaïs Khuong
Valentin Lecheval
Richard Fournier
Stéphane Blanco
Sébastian Weitz
Jean-Jacques Bezian
Jacques Gautrais
author_sort Anaïs Khuong
title How do ants make sense of gravity? A Boltzmann Walker analysis of Lasius niger trajectories on various inclines.
title_short How do ants make sense of gravity? A Boltzmann Walker analysis of Lasius niger trajectories on various inclines.
title_full How do ants make sense of gravity? A Boltzmann Walker analysis of Lasius niger trajectories on various inclines.
title_fullStr How do ants make sense of gravity? A Boltzmann Walker analysis of Lasius niger trajectories on various inclines.
title_full_unstemmed How do ants make sense of gravity? A Boltzmann Walker analysis of Lasius niger trajectories on various inclines.
title_sort how do ants make sense of gravity? a boltzmann walker analysis of lasius niger trajectories on various inclines.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description The goal of this study is to describe accurately how the directional information given by support inclinations affects the ant Lasius niger motion in terms of a behavioral decision. To this end, we have tracked the spontaneous motion of 345 ants walking on a 0.5×0.5 m plane canvas, which was tilted with 5 various inclinations by [Formula: see text] rad ([Formula: see text] data points). At the population scale, support inclination favors dispersal along uphill and downhill directions. An ant's decision making process is modeled using a version of the Boltzmann Walker model, which describes an ant's random walk as a series of straight segments separated by reorientation events, and was extended to take directional influence into account. From the data segmented accordingly ([Formula: see text] segments), this extension allows us to test separately how average speed, segments lengths and reorientation decisions are affected by support inclination and current walking direction of the ant. We found that support inclination had a major effect on average speed, which appeared approximately three times slower on the [Formula: see text] incline. However, we found no effect of the walking direction on speed. Contrastingly, we found that ants tend to walk longer in the same direction when they move uphill or downhill, and also that they preferentially adopt new uphill or downhill headings at turning points. We conclude that ants continuously adapt their decision making about where to go, and how long to persist in the same direction, depending on how they are aligned with the line of maximum declivity gradient. Hence, their behavioral decision process appears to combine klinokinesis with geomenotaxis. The extended Boltzmann Walker model parameterized by these effects gives a fair account of the directional dispersal of ants on inclines.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3812222?pdf=render
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