Polarised skylight and the landmark panorama provide night-active bull ants with compass information during route following
0106 biological sciences
Light
Photoperiod
Keywords: animal
animal behavior
01 natural sciences
orientation
Landmark panorama
Homing Behavior
Myrmecia pyriformis
Orientation
Photography
Animals
ant
Polarised skylight
S Ant
depth perception
Ants
food
article
association
15. Life on land
photography
Navigation
photoperiodicity
astronomy
Nocturnal foraging
Food
Space Perception
physiology
Solar System
Cues
light
DOI:
10.1242/jeb.049338
Publication Date:
2011-01-12T18:03:58Z
AUTHORS (4)
ABSTRACT
SUMMARY
Navigating animals are known to use a number of celestial and terrestrial compass cues that allow them to determine and control their direction of travel. Which of the cues dominate appears to depend on their salience. Here we show that night-active bull ants attend to both the pattern of polarised skylight and the landmark panorama in their familiar habitat. When the two directional cues are in conflict, ants choose a compromise direction. However, landmark guidance appears to be the primary mechanism of navigation used by forager ants, with those cues in the direction of heading having the greatest influence on navigation. Different colonies respond to the removal of these cues to different degrees, depending on the directional information provided by the local landmark panorama. Interestingly, other parts of the surrounding panorama also influence foraging speed and accuracy, suggesting that they too play a role in navigation.
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