نتایج جستجو برای: harvester ants messor galla f

تعداد نتایج: 316755  

Journal: :Frontiers in ecology and evolution 2016
Jacob D. Davidson Roxana P. Arauco-Aliaga Sam Crow Deborah M. Gordon Mark S. Goldman

Harvester ant colonies adjust their foraging activity to day-to-day changes in food availability and hour-to-hour changes in environmental conditions. This collective behavior is regulated through interactions, in the form of brief antennal contacts, between outgoing foragers and returning foragers with food. Here we consider how an ant, waiting in the entrance chamber just inside the nest entr...

1997
W. L. MEYER

Adult worker of Pogonomyrmex sp. Photo courtesty of J.O. Schmidt Insects in the order Hymenoptera were recorded as early as the 26th century BC as possessing a venom toxic to vertebrates. Harvester ants in the genus Pogonomyrmex have the most toxic venom based on mice LD50 values, with P. maricopa venom being the most toxic. The LD50 value for this species is 0.12 mg/kg injected intravenously i...

Journal: :Zootaxa 2014
Kathryn S Sparks Alan N Andersen Andrew D Austin

A recent molecular, morphological and distributional analysis of Monomorium rothsteini demonstrated that it comprises many separately evolving lineages that could be recognised morphologically and/or genetically based on mitochondrial DNA sequences. Based on these results M. rothsteini is revised, resulting in four species being brought out of synonymy (M. bogischi Wheeler, M. leda Forel, M. hu...

Journal: :Journal of the Royal Society, Interface 2017
Jacob D Davidson Deborah M Gordon

Local interactions, when individuals meet, can regulate collective behaviour. In a system without any central control, the rate of interaction may depend simply on how the individuals move around. But interactions could in turn influence movement; individuals might seek out interactions, or their movement in response to interaction could influence further interaction rates. We develop a general...

2007
Deborah M. Gordon Susan Holmes Serban Nacu

In the seed-eating ant Pogonomyrmex barbatus, the return of successful foragers stimulates inactive foragers to leave the nest. The rate at which successful foragers return to the nest depends on food availability; the more food available, the more quickly foragers will find it and bring it back. Field experiments examined how quickly a colony can adjust to a decline in the rate of forager retu...

Journal: :Animal behaviour 2013
Noa Pinter-Wollman Ashwin Bala Andrew Merrell Jovel Queirolo Martin C Stumpe Susan Holmes Deborah M Gordon

Social groups balance flexibility and robustness in their collective response to environmental changes using feedback between behavioural processes that operate at different timescales. Here we examine how behavioural processes operating at two timescales regulate the foraging activity of colonies of the harvester ant, Pogonomyrmex barbatus, allowing them to balance their response to food avail...

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