Pattern Formation and Optimization in Army Ant Raids
Ricard V. Solé,
Eric Bonabeau,
Jordi Delgado,
Pau Fernández and
Jesus Marín
Working Papers from Santa Fe Institute
Abstract:
Army ant colonies display complex foraging raid patterns involving thousands of individuals communicating through chemical trails. In this paper we explore, by means of a simple search algorithm, the properties of these trails in order to test the hypothesis that their structure reflects an optimized mechanism for exporing and exploiting food resources. The raid patterns of three army ant species, Ection hamatum, Ection burchelli, and Ection rapex, are analysed. The respective diets of these species involve large but rare, small but common, and a combination of large but rare and small but common, food sources. Using a model proposed by Deneubourg et al. (1989), we simulate the formation of raid patterns in reponse to different food distributions. Our results indicate that the empirically observed raid patterns maximise return on investment, that is, the amount of food brought back to the nest per unit of energy expended, for each of the diets. Moreover, the values of the parameters that characterise the three optimal pattern-generating mechanisms are strikingly similar. Therefore the same behavioural rules at theindividual level can produce optimal colony-level patters. The evolutionary implications of these finding are discussed.
Keywords: Army ants; foraging; optimization (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1999-10
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-evo
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:wop:safiwp:99-10-074
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