Tracking Whole Colonies Shows Ants Make Career Moves
ananyo writes "Researchers have tagged every single worker in entire colonies and used a computer to track them, accumulating what they say is the largest-ever data set on ant interactions. The biologists have found that the workers fall into three social groups that perform different roles: nursing the queen and young; cleaning the colony; and foraging for food. The insects, they found, tend to graduate from one group to another as they age. By creating heat maps to represent the workers’ positions, Mersch's team showed that nurses and foragers stick to their own company and seldom mix, even if the colony’s entrance and brood chamber are close together (abstract). Cleaners are more widely dispersed, patrolling the whole colony and interacting with both of the other groups. 'The ants can probably be in any place within their enclosures in less than a minute,' says Mersch, 'but even in these simple spaces, they organize into these spatial groups.'"
Specializations. Interesting. Does that imply that ants can learn? One would think they were just a bundle of instinct. Maybe not.
Tired of your dead-end role in the colony? Frustrated that your boss doesn't respect your contribution to the brood? Dice for Ants has over 16 billion job openings for drones just like you. Make the jump today to get the skills to be your own queen. Network with other ambitious insects like yourself. Get advice from others who have made the leap from cleaner to forager.
Apparently (google tells me) ants live about 90 days. Let's say that humans live about 90 years. In that case, saying "The ants can probably be in any place within their enclosures in less than a minute..." equates to "The humans can probably be in any place within their enclosures in roughly 6 hours, but even in these simple spaces, they organize into these spatial groups."
>> workers move between jobs as they get older — nurses are generally younger than cleaners, which are younger than foragers.
So...the workers generally try to further and further away from the queen as they get older? I'll bet there's a Red-Green bit we could reference here.
Wake me up when ants start building Mutalisks...
The old ants know they either have to go to Carousel or leave the colony!
about applicants not having experience. This is the way it should be done: start at the bottom, learn what you need, then move up in the world using your gained experience.
Now compare that to human employers where you're supposed to magically know everything about how an employer works despite never having worked for them.
Further, unlike humans, the ants don't care about how old the ant is. All they care about is if you can do the job.
We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
Or are the young ones just getting extra protection because they are more valuable for the colony at that point? When they get older they might become less valuable for the tasks that involve nursing and get demoted to cleaning. Even later, they get to go outside! How nice! From the safety from the center of the colony to the front in afghanistan doesn't sound like a promotion to me. I am not saying they are wrong, I am saying this is so interesting that it deserves a really good extended study to find the real reason for this behavior.
Unfortunately, ant colonies are rife with nepotism. Also, instead of centralising their information, they appear to work entirely upon hearsay and rumour. Basically, if you do find yourself a position in an ant colony, don't expect to enjoy it.
*this space intentionally left blank
"One of the four pointers saying 'come and see', and I saw, and beheld a white
I haven't read the actual paper yet, but we can draw a few tidbits from the news article and the abstract...
It's not that the results were unexpected or overturn long held theories about ant behavior. But the work produced a couple of interesting and valuable outcomes. First, they demonstrated that they could effectively tag and track ants in an experimental setting. That by itself is notable--it opens up a lot of interesting research opportunities. Second, they analyzed the tracking data to quantify the spatial and temporal interactions of the ants, and in particular, between functional groups of ants. They were able to determine that there were significant cleaner-nurse and cleaner-forager interactions but limited nurse-forager interactions. Not just in a general kind of way, but with real measurements.
We should hold off judgment until we have analyzed more colonies. This could be the North Korea of ant colonies and the others could have more affluent and free societies.
The Official Site of 1337 Pwnage