• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: Accuracy and spread of nest search behaviour in the Saharan silver ant, Cataglyphis bombycina, and in the salt pan species, Cataglyphis fortis
  • Contributor: Pfeffer, Sarah; Wahl, Verena; Wolf, Harald
  • imprint: Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020
  • Published in: Animal Cognition
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.1007/s10071-020-01371-6
  • ISSN: 1435-9448; 1435-9456
  • Keywords: Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ; Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
  • Origination:
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  • Description: <jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>Desert ants of the genus <jats:italic>Cataglyphis</jats:italic> are renowned for their navigation abilities, especially for their beeline homing after meandering foraging excursions reaching several hundreds of meters in length. A spiralling nest search is performed when an ant misses the nest entrance upon completing its homebound travel. We examined the nest search behaviours of two desert ant species dwelling in different habitats—<jats:italic>Cataglyphis bombycina</jats:italic> living in the dunes of the Sahara and <jats:italic>Cataglyphis fortis</jats:italic> found in the salt pans of North Africa. The two species show distinct differences in walking behaviour. <jats:italic>C. bombycina</jats:italic> performs a strict tripod gait with pronounced aerial phases, high stride frequencies, and extremely brief ground contact times. In view of these peculiarities and the yielding sand dune substrate, we hypothesised that homing accuracy, and namely distance measurement by stride integration, should be lower in <jats:italic>C. bombycina</jats:italic>, compared to the well-studied <jats:italic>C. fortis</jats:italic> with less specialised walking behaviour. We tested this hypothesis in ants’ homebound runs from a feeding site in a linear channel setup. Surprisingly, the accuracies of nest searches were similar in the two ant species, and search accuracy was also independent of the walking substrate, soft dune sand or a hard floor. The spread of the nest search, by contrast, differed significantly between the two species, <jats:italic>C. bombycina</jats:italic> exhibiting a larger search spread. This may be interpreted as an increased path integration uncertainty due to the above locomotor specialisations, or as a compensation strategy accounting for the silver ants’ particular environmental and behavioural situation.</jats:p>