4.5 Article

Interactions and information: exploring task allocation in ant colonies using network analysis

期刊

ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR
卷 189, 期 -, 页码 69-81

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2022.04.015

关键词

ant behaviour; effective information; emergent behaviour; information flow; insect social network; task allocation

资金

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) [DGE-1632976]
  2. NSF-Graduate Research Fellowship Program
  3. NSF [IOS 2015932]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

In animal societies, individuals take on different roles to meet their own needs and the needs of their group. Ant colonies exhibit high levels of organizational complexity, with individual ants fulfilling various roles over time. This study explores the relationship between interaction networks, task allocation, and task switching in ant colonies, shedding light on the impact of information flow on task allocation.
In animal societies, individuals may take on different roles to fulfil their own needs and the needs of their group. Ant colonies display high levels of organizational complexity, with ants fulfilling different roles at different timescales (what is known as task allocation). Factors affecting task allocation can be at the individual level (e.g. physiology), or at the group level (e.g. the network of interactions). We focus on group level processes by exploring the relationship between interaction networks, task allocation and task switching using a previously published data set (Mersch et al., 2013, Science, 340(6136), 1090-1093) tracking the behaviour of six Camponotus fellah colonies over 41 days. In our new analyses, our goal was to better explain the noisy process of task switching beyond simple age polyethism. First, we investigated the architecture of interaction networks using node (individual) level network measures and their relation to the individual's task - foraging, cleaning or nursing - and whether or not the ant switched tasks. We then explored how noisy information propagation was among ants, as a function of the colony composition (how many ants carried out which tasks), through the information-theoretic metric of 'effective information'. Our results show that interaction history is tied to task allocation: ants that switched to a task were more likely to have interacted with other ants carrying out that task. The degree to which interactions related to task allocation, as well as the noise in those interactions, depended on which groups of ants were interacting. Overall, we found that colony cohesion was stable even as ant level network measures varied more for ants when they switched functional groups; thus, ant colonies maintained a high level of information flow as determined by network analysis, and ant functional groups played different roles in maintaining colony cohesion through varied information flows.(c) 2022 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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