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First published online April 18, 2006
Journal of Experimental Biology 209, 1777-1783 (2006)
Published by The Company of Biologists 2006
doi: 10.1242/jeb.02170
The role of visual cues in directed aerial descent of Cephalotes atratus workers (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)
1 Department of Pathology, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston,
Texas 77555, USA
2 Florida Medical Entomology Laboratory, 200 9th Street SE, Vero
Beach, Florida 32962, USA
3 Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley,
California 94720, USA
4 Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Apdo. 2072, Balboa, Republic of
Panama
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: syanoviak{at}yahoo.com)
Accepted 14 February 2006
| Summary |
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Key words: ant, Cephalotes atratus, behavior, color, gliding, orientation, tropical forest
| Introduction |
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Incident light is greatly modified within forests, becoming scattered and
diffused by the complex matrix of leaf surfaces, but also by trunks and other
woody components (Endler, 1993
;
Shashar et al., 1998
). Tree
trunks are a conspicuous part of the visual landscape in even the most dense
tropical forests, and the light reflected from tree bark is described as
having moderate brightness along with moderate to high wavelengths, i.e. they
appear as brown (Endler, 1993
).
However, when viewed by humans from midstory and canopy heights, many tree
trunks in lowland forest are light-colored columns that sharply contrast
against a dark green background of foliage
(Fig. 1). This phenomenon
characterizes many tree species in the lowland tropics regardless of intrinsic
bark color because light-colored epiphytic lichens are ubiquitous in highly
exposed areas such as forest edges and canopies
(Frahm, 2003
).
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Workers of Cephalotes atratus (L.) (Formicidae: Myrmicinae) and
several other arboreal ant species direct their aerial trajectories during a
fall (Yanoviak et al., 2005
).
This behavior is visually mediated and targeted toward tree trunks, lianas and
climbing ropes, all of which generally appear lighter in color than the
surrounding vegetation (Fig.
1). The attraction of falling C. atratus to light-colored
columns is sufficiently strong that a long, narrow piece of suspended white
cloth can be an effective surrogate tree trunk for observations of directed
descent (Yanoviak et al.,
2005
). However, this apparent preference for targets with high
reflectance is based solely on qualitative observations. We have examined
experimentally how the reflectance properties of such simulated tree trunks
influence the ability of arboreal ants to direct their aerial trajectories
during a fall.
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| Materials and methods |
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3000 mm of
rainfall annually. Detailed climate and floristic information for the region
are provided elsewhere (Madigosky and
Vatnick, 2000
We used a GretagMacbethTM Eye-One spectroradiometer to quantify
reflectance of potential natural targets for falling ants, focusing on tree
trunks and associated surrounding vegetation at the ACTS walkway and highway
sites. We recorded 40100 reflectance measurements (ranging from 380 to
730 nm at 10 nm intervals) on the vertical trunk surface at or below the lower
crown branches of each of 21 trees. Measured trees included two Inga
spp. (Fabaceae) and two Brosimum lactescens (Moraceae); the remaining
17 trees were of different genera. Individual measurements were each separated
by
10 cm along and around the trunk. The total number of measurements
obtained for a given tree depended on variation in reflectance properties such
that fewer measurements were taken on more homogeneous trunks. We similarly
quantified the reflectance of surrounding vegetation near the focal trees by
measuring the upper surface of 15 leaves on each of 51 neighboring lower
canopy and midstory trees. The point of measurement on each leaf avoided the
midvein but otherwise was selected haphazardly. When possible, we included
measurements of the leaves of the focal tree and nearby epiphytes. We compared
the reflectance properties of the trunks and vegetation by plotting the
average (±95% C.I.) median reflectance values at each wavelength for
the 21 trunks and 51 plants. We also compared average total reflectance (i.e.
the sum of reflectance values across all wavelengths for a given measurement)
among trees with a one-way ANOVA (SAS
Institute, 2002
).
Orientation to target color and brightness
Experimental data for the color and brightness choice experiments were
obtained at the ACTS canopy walkway platform 5-B, which receives minimal
tourist traffic and provides an unobstructed 22 m fall from the lower crown of
the platform tree to the understory. In March 2005, we suspended five colored
velvet sheets (red, black, blue, yellow and white) side-by-side from the
platform railing. Each sheet was 10 m long and 16 cm wide; their juxtaposition
produced a multicolored column 80 cm in total width (Figs
1 and
2). The column was hung
approximately centered in front of the platform tree trunk and was 1.6 m
horizontally distant from the trunk. Plastic pipes were passed through loops
at both ends of the sheets to improve stability of the assembly
(Fig. 1). We followed the same
protocol in May 2005, but replaced the blue sheet with a green felt sheet of
equal dimensions. The experiment was not run with blue and green sheets
together (i.e. resulting in a total of six sheets in the column) because of
time and logistical limitations. We measured each sheet at five different
points spaced
1 m apart with the spectroradiometer to quantify their
reflectance properties (Fig.
3).
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Foraging Cephalotes atratus (L.) workers were collected from four trees (representing at least two distinct colonies) at horizontal distances ranging from 50150 m from platform 5-B. We dropped 2738 C. atratus workers in each of 14 trials (trials 17 in March 2005 and 814 in May 2005), and rearranged the color order in the column between trials (Table 1). Logistical constraints prevented us from testing every possible combination and placement of the five different sheets. However, we arranged the color order such that all paired color combinations were presented at least twice (e.g., white was next to black in two trials, and next to non-black colors in the remaining five trials; Table 1). All experimental trials were conducted under fair weather conditions between 08:00 and 16:00.
Ants were dropped from a point 1 m in front of the center sheet in the series (Fig. 2). Each ant was placed in a small plastic vial coated internally with fluon. The vial was inverted at the drop point during periods of still air (as determined by lack of motion in the sheets) and the trajectory of the ant visually monitored until the end of its fall. The landing point of the ant was recorded as red, blue, black, white, yellow, green, or as a `miss' or `lost'. Ants in the `miss' group directed their aerial descent, but did not land on any of the sheets (i.e. they fell more than 10 m before ultimately gliding to the platform's tree trunk). `Lost' ants either fell to the ground or glided to a different tree. Each ant was used only once in the experiment.
We repeated the above setup in January 2006 using four cotton/polyester sheets representing a brightness gradient (white, gray, dark gray and black; Table 2). Reflectance was measured at five different points on each sheet using the aforementioned spectroradiometer (Fig. 4). The sheets were hung from platform 5-B and data were recorded as described above.
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To test for any confounding effects of handling and initial conditions, ants used in the gray shade experiment were dropped using one of three methods: (1) with forceps, (2) with a fluon-coated vial as described above, and (3) by inducing a natural jump or fall. Thirty ants were dropped using each of the three techniques. All remaining ants used in the gray shade experiment were dropped using the fluon-coated vial because this was the easiest and most efficient method.
Natural jumps were induced by allowing an ant to walk on a stick secured to
the 5-B platform railing immediately above and perpendicular to the hanging
sheets. Movement of the ant along the stick back toward the railing was
restricted with a barrier of toothpaste. The ant was then exposed to
conspecific alarm pheromones by placing
10 C. atratus workers
inside a plastic 500 ml bottle, which was then shaken, uncapped, and gently
squeezed while positioned
10 cm lateral to (and directed toward) the ant
on the stick. All C. atratus workers exposed to alarm pheromones in
this manner responded by dropping or jumping off the stick. They also jumped
when exposed to alarm pheromones of other species in the tribe Cephalotini
(i.e. Cephalotes spp. and Procryptocerus spp.). The only
limitation of this methodology was that the ants in the bottle had to be
replaced or allowed to rest after several successive trials, presumably
because they became accustomed to the disturbance and/or their supplies of
pheromone were exhausted.
We used G-tests with Williams' correction
(Sokal and Rohlf, 1995
) to
compare landing frequencies of ants on the colored columns to null frequencies
for each of the 14 trials. The null frequency for each of the five sheets used
in the color experiment was calculated as its relative distance from the drop
point, which itself was a function of the position of the sheet in a given
trial (Fig. 2). Following the
trajectory pattern and glide angle described
(Yanoviak et al., 2005
), the
null landing pattern approximated a hyperbolic conic section for a cone with
apex
3 m below the drop point and with a slope of 15°. Thus, an ant
landing in position A or E (Fig.
2) traveled 5.1% farther than an ant landing at C, and an ant
landing at B or D traveled 1.3% farther. A similar correction for expected
null frequencies was applied to the four sheets used in the gray shade
experiment.
We compared the mean proportion of ants landing on each color and shade
with a one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) and a Tukey multiple comparison
test. Proportional data were arcsine square-root transformed before analysis
and statistical significance of the ANOVA results was determined with
Bonferroni-adjusted
of 0.025.
Effects of target color and brightness on glide performance
To measure gliding performance, we dropped 340 C. atratus workers
(eight trials of 3652 ants each) as described above, but presented them
with only one of the colored or gray sheets in each trial. We hung a weighted
string marked with flagging at 1 m intervals next to the sheet, and measured
glide performance as the vertical drop distance to the point of contact (to
the nearest 0.5 m) (Yanoviak et al.,
2005
). Ants not landing on the sheet were scored as miss or lost
as described above, and each ant was used only once. We analyzed the landing
frequency on each of the colored sheets with a G-test using a null
expected success rate of 85% (Yanoviak et
al., 2005
), and a one-way ANOVA to compare glide performance (in
terms of glide indices) among the different colored sheets.
Glide performance is influenced by body size such that smaller ants tend to
fall shorter vertical distances before landing on the sheets
(Yanoviak et al., 2005
). To
avoid this potentially confounding variable in performance tests, we estimated
the mass of each dropped ant from head widths measured with calipers in the
field (see Yanoviak et al.,
2005
). We used a nested ANOVA to determine if the average
log-transformed mass of ants differed among target colors or shades, and if
the success of landing on a sheet of any particular color varied with body
size. Finally, because the white and black sheets used in performance tests in
January 2006 were of different material (cotton/polyester) from those used in
2005 (velvet), we compared glide indices between the fabric types using
t-tests.
| Results |
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Landing frequency of ants on the colored and gray sheets differed
significantly from that expected by chance in 19 of 21 trials (colors:
Gadj>12.73, d.f.=4, P<0.025; gray
shades: Gadj>9.34, d.f.=3, P
0.025), and
ants were strongly attracted to the white sheet regardless of its position in
the series. The two replicates for which ants showed no significant
association with color or shade had white and yellow (run #9) or white and
gray (#16) sheets at opposite ends of the experimental configuration (Tables
1 and
2). The majority of ants
dropped in run #9 (57%) still landed on either the yellow or white sheets, and
70% landed on either white or gray in run #16.
|
Effects of target color on glide performance
The number of successful glides in the performance tests was significantly
lower than expected for all colors except white
(Gadj>9.57, d.f.=1, P<0.005; see sample
sizes in Fig. 7), whereas the
frequency of ants landing on the white sheet (88%) was statistically similar
to the 85% success rate observed in prior studies of gliding in C.
atratus (Gadj=0.37, d.f.=1, P>0.50)
(Yanoviak et al., 2005
). We
observed that ants were more likely to orient to more distant alternative
targets when the contrast between the experimental target and the surrounding
vegetation was low (e.g. with target sheets of green, black, and red).
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Variance heterogeneity in the performance data was high and could not be
corrected by standard data transformations. This was specifically due to the
greater variance associated with the red sheet
(Fig. 7). Thus we used a
nonparametric KruskalWallis test in place of ANOVA to assess
differences in glide indices (i.e. performance) among colors. This test
yielded a significant result (
2=24.78, d.f.=7,
P=0.0008). When the red sheet data were removed from the analysis,
ANOVA and Tukey comparisons showed significantly better glide performance to
the white vs. the green sheet (F6,143=4.29,
P=0.0005,
=0.025). This statistical difference reflects a
physical difference in vertical drop distance of only 1.6 m (drop distance,
mean ± 1 s.d.: green=7.7±1.59 m, white=6.1±1.37 m). Minor
differences in behavior among individual ants during the non-equilibrium
portion of the descent had large effects on overall gliding performance and
contributed to the high variance in glide indices (S.Y., personal
observation).
There was no effect on glide performance (i.e. glide indices) of the different fabric types (cotton/polyester versus velvet) used for the black and white sheets (black: t=0.73, d.f.=18, P=0.48; white: t=0.83, d.f.=42, P=0.41). Also, the average mass of dropped ants did not differ among the color treatments, and an ant's successful glide to a sheet did not vary with body size within a given target color (Table 3).
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Although the experiments reported here were always conducted in fair weather, we found that the strongest and most consistent attraction to the white sheet occurred under overcast conditions. Any patches of direct sunlight landing on the colored sheets (and even the black sheet) appeared to override color differences, causing some ants to modify their trajectories several times during the fall. This was most apparent when the ants were presented with single sheets in the performance experiment. Specifically, sunflecks on the sheet occasionally caused ants to follow a spiral trajectory, ultimately gliding to the platform tree trunk after passing the free end of the sheet.
| Discussion |
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5 m
(Endler, 1993
Although we did not test all possible colors, shades and combinations in
the choice experiment, ants clearly were most responsive to white and gray,
and moderately responsive to colors reflecting strongly in the 440450
nm range. This was the only region for which the black and red sheets had
considerably lower reflectance than the blue and yellow sheets, which may
explain the intermediate attractiveness of the latter two colors. The
similarly low relative abundance of ants landing on red and black sheets
suggests that C. atratus, like most insects
(Chapman, 1998
), cannot see
red.
We attribute the lack of marked difference in gliding performance amoung
colors and gray shades to intrinsic properties of the aerial trajectory. Most
of the variation in the total vertical distance traveled during directed
descent appears to be linked to the accelerating and parachuting phase of the
drop sequence, during which the ant makes the transition from undirected
parachuting to visually acquiring and orientating to a landing target (see
Yanoviak et al., 2005
). The
relatively high frequency of landings on the white sheet shows that
differences in target quality affect the number of successful landings, but
not necessarily the vertical distance traveled. Glide indices in C.
atratus appear to be more strongly influenced by other factors,
especially differences in individual ant behavior in the first 23 m of
the fall. Although we detected a significant difference in glide performance
between the white and green sheets, this difference does not represent a
sufficiently large vertical drop to be biologically relevant, except possibly
for C. atratus living in trees <10 m tall, or for falls between
branches within the canopy.
Our results support the hypothesis that differences in reflectance
properties among potential targets influence successful directional
orientation and aerial targeting in falling ants. However, the moderate number
of ants that landed on the green, black, dark gray and red sheets suggests
that other characteristics of light reflected from targets are also relevant
to this behavior. For example, various flying insects and wingless workers of
some ant species use polarized light as an orientation cue, particularly as a
horizon detector (e.g. von Frisch,
1967
; Fent and Wehner,
1985
). Celestially polarized light penetrates far beneath the
forest canopy and may become highly linearly polarized under dense foliage
(Shashar et al., 1998
).
Moreover, light reflected from tree trunks tends to be vertically polarized
whereas light from leaves generally is polarized in the horizontal plane, and
these patterns tend to persist even under heavily shaded conditions
(Shashar et al., 1998
). Thus,
multiple orientation cues are available in terms of direction of polarization
of incident and reflected light, and we speculate that falling ants may be
using such cues, in addition to brightness and contrast as shown here, to
locate tree trunks and other targets during aerial descent.
Finally, horizon detection and use of polarized light in orientation (e.g.
via a celestial compass) may be improved by, if not be dependent
upon, the presence of ocelli (e.g. Fent and
Wehner, 1985
). Whereas C. atratus workers lack ocelli,
other arboreal ant taxa, including some that exhibit directed aerial descent
(e.g. Pseudomyrmex spp.)
(Yanoviak et al., 2005
), do
have ocelli and would be appropriate subjects for further experiments on
visual orientation within tropical forests.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
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