4.2 Article

Effect of repetition of vertical and horizontal routes on navigation performance in Australian bull ants

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LEARNING & BEHAVIOR
卷 -, 期 -, 页码 -

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.3758/s13420-023-00614-z

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Myrmecia midas; Navigation; Path integration; View-based navigation; Ants

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This study used rewinding displacement method to test the path integration navigation of M. midas ants. The results showed that rewound ants did not seem to accumulate path integration vector, although there was some effect of vertical rewinding, suggesting potential higher sensitivity while descending the foraging tree. However, the decrease in navigational efficiency due to capture was larger than the vertical rewinding effect, which may suggest aversion rather than path integration caused the vertical rewinding response.
Solitarily foraging ant species differ in their reliance on their two primary navigational systems- path integration and visual learning. Despite many species of Australian bull ants spending most of their foraging time on their foraging tree, little is known about the use of these systems while climbing. Rewinding displacements are commonly used to understand navigational system usage, and work by introducing a mismatch between these navigational systems, by displacing foragers after they have run-down their path integration vector. We used rewinding to test the role of path integration on the arboreal and terrestrial navigation of M. midas. We rewound foragers along either the vertical portion, the ground surface portion, or across both portions of their homing trip. Since rewinding involves repeatedly capturing and releasing foragers, we included a nondisplacement, capture-and-release control, in which the path integration vector is unchanged. We found that rewound foragers do not seem to accumulate path integration vector, although a limited effect of vertical rewinding was found, suggesting a potential higher sensitivity while descending the foraging tree. However, the decrease in navigational efficiency due to capture was larger than the vertical rewinding effect, which along with the negative impact of the vertical surface, and an interaction between capture and rewinding, may suggest aversion rather than path integration caused the vertical rewinding response. Together these results add to the evidence that M. midas makes minimal use of path integration while foraging, and the growing evidence that they are capable of quickly learning from aversive stimulus.

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