First published online May 8, 2007
Journal of Experimental Biology 210, 1804-1812 (2007)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2007
doi: 10.1242/jeb.02769
Homing strategies of the Australian desert ant Melophorus bagoti II. Interaction of the path integrator with visual cue information
Ajay Narendra
Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW
2109, Australia

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Fig. 1. (A) Experimental set-up of the route-mark corridor in the training field.
(B) An example of a homing ant's trajectory (thick line), to demonstrate the
method of measuring the deviation from the nestfeeder line (NF)
at every 1 m interval. Cylinders are represented as filled circles.
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Fig. 2. Trajectories of homebound ants in (A) an unfamiliar test field and (B) the
familiar training field. Each line represents the path of an ant. (A)
Trajectories of FvRm+ (N=24), FvRm (N=17) and ZvRm+
(N=15) from release point R towards the fictive nest N*. (B)
Trajectories of FvRm+ (N=20), FvRm (N=20) and ZvRm+
(N=21) from the feeder F to the nest N. Route-marks for homing ants
are shown as black circles. In FvRm condition, the grey circles
indicate the location of the route-marks that were removed during test
conditions. Grid size is 1 m2.
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Fig. 4. Trajectories of homing ants following a sideways displacement. Ants
travelled through a route-mark corridor (array of black circles) from nest N
to a feeder F and were displaced from the feeder 1.5 m (N=21), 3 m
(N=20), 6 m (N=18) and 10 m (N=21) from the feeder.
(A) All trajectories of ants displaced sideways. (B) Example paths of ants at
each displaced distance that had zero turns (black), one turn (blue), no loops
(green) and one loop (red) are shown. Grid size is 1 m2.
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Fig. 7. Illustration of the three competing directional cues for ants displaced
sideways to R. Route cues direct the ants to move laterally towards the
familiar route; distant cue direct the ants towards the nest, whereas the
ants' path integrator, relying on the sky compass, directs the ant to the
fictive nest N*. Information from route cues, distant cues and the path
integrator are in conflict in full-vector ants. Information from route cues
and distant cues are in conflict in zero-vector ants.
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© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2007