masterThesis
Tomada de decisão individual e aprendizado em Dinoponera quadríceps (Ponerinae, Hymenoptera) forrageando em ambientes dinâmicos
Fecha
2014-08-26Registro en:
SILVA NETO, Waldemar Alves da. Tomada de decisão individual e aprendizado em Dinoponera quadríceps (Ponerinae, Hymenoptera) forrageando em ambientes dinâmicos. 2014. 30f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Psicobiologia) - Centro de Biociências, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2014.
Autor
Silva Neto, Waldemar Alves da
Resumen
When searching for food, animals often make decisions of where to go,
how long to stay in a foraging area and whether or not to return to the last
visited spot. These decisions can be enhanced by cognitive traits and adjusted
based on previous experience. In social insects such as ants, foraging
efficiency have an impact on both individual and colony level. The present study
investigated, in the laboratory, the effect of distance from food, capture success
and food size, and reward rate on decisions of where to forage in Dinoponera
quadriceps, a ponerine ant that forage solitarily and individually make their
foraging decisions. We also investigated the influence of learning on the
performance of workers over successive trips searching for food by measuring
the patch residence time in each foraging trip. Four scenarios were created
differing in food reward rates, food size offered and distances colony-food site.
Our work has shown that as a rule-of-thumb, workers of D. quadriceps return to
the place where a prey item was found on the previous trip, regardless of
distance, food size and reward rate. When ants did not capture preys, they were
more likely to change path to search for food. However, in one of the scenarios,
this decision to switch paths when unsuccessful was less evident, possibly due
to the greater variation of possible outcomes ants could experience in this
scenario and cognitive constraints of D. quadriceps to predict variations of food
distribution. Our results also indicated a learning process of routes of
exploration as well as the food site conditions for exploration. After repeated
trips, foragers reduced the patch residence time in areas that they did not
capture food and quickly changed of foraging area, increasing their foraging
efficiency.