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Title of Journal: Insect Soc

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Abbravation: Insectes Sociaux

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Springer Basel

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DOI

10.1016/0378-4363(80)90211-9

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1420-9098

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Cooperative transport in ants a review of proxima

Authors: H F McCreery M D Breed
Publish Date: 2013/12/25
Volume: 61, Issue: 2, Pages: 99-110
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Abstract

The behavioral mechanisms that lead to cooperation in social insects are often unknown or poorly understood Cooperative transport or the movement of an object by two or more individuals is a particularly impressive example of collaboration among workers Many ant species perform this behavior but there is extreme interspecific variation in efficiency Why are some ant species so efficient at cooperative transport while others are so inefficient Surprisingly the scientific community has little proximate understanding of the adaptations that make certain species excel at this behavior This work provides a review of the behavioral rules that separate the efficient cooperative transporters from the inefficient We present two measures of efficiency of cooperative transport as well as a flowchart of the cooperative transport process By identifying the steps and flow of information the flowchart enables careful modeling of cooperative transport from a mechanistic perspective Previous studies of each of the four phases of cooperative transport are discussed including decision recruitment organization and transport We also present hypotheses regarding behavioral mechanisms that may modulate efficiencyWe thank the Plant–Animal Interactions Discussion Group the Breed Lab and Tim Szewczyk for their helpful comments on the manuscript We thank the Breed Lab and the Taco Tuesday Group for feedback on ideas and implications HM was supported by the University of Colorado Boulder Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology


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Other Papers In This Journal:

  1. Mating frequency and maternity of males in Melipona mondury (Hymenoptera: Apidae)
  2. Elevational and geographic variation in army ant swarm raid rates
  3. Task allocation and reproductive skew in social mass provisioning carpenter bees in relation to age and size
  4. Size and composition of swarming colonies in Provespa anomala (Hymenoptera, Vespidae), a nocturnal social wasp
  5. Der Einfluss von Umweltbedingungen auf die Bildung von Gynandromorphen bei der Honigbiene Apis mellifica L.
  6. Bumble bee olfactory information flow and contact-based foraging activation
  7. Sexual interactions and nestmate recognition in invasive populations of Polistes dominulus wasps
  8. Regional trends and preliminary results on the local expansion rate in the invasive garden ant, Lasius neglectus (Hymenoptera, Formicidae)
  9. Behavioral defense strategies of the stingless bee, Austroplebeia australis , against the small hive beetle, Aethina tumida
  10. Alkylpyrazines: alarm pheromone components of the little fire ant, Wasmannia auropunctata (Roger) (Hymenoptera, Formicidae)
  11. Olfactory associative learning in two African stingless bee species ( Meliponula ferruginea and M. bocandei , Meliponini)
  12. Caste developmental pathways in colonies of Coptotermes lacteus (Froggatt) headed by primary reproductives (Isoptera, Rhinotermitidae)
  13. The distribution of weaver ant pheromones on host trees
  14. Vision-based ability of an ant-mimicking jumping spider to discriminate between models, conspecific individuals and prey
  15. The influence of soil temperature on the nesting cycle of the halictid bee Lasioglossum malachurum
  16. The production of soldiers and the maintenance of caste proportions delay the growth of termite incipient colonies

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