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Foraging dynamics in the group-hunting myrmicine ant,Pheidologeton diversus
Authors:Mark W Moffett
Institution:(1) Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, 02138 Cambridge, Massachusetts
Abstract:Pheidologeton diversus workers group-hunt (that is, search for food in raiding groups) and are in this way remarkably convergent with army ants (Dorylinae and Ecitoninae). Raids appear usually to take independent courses and are capable of tracking areas of high food density. However, raid advance is not dependent on continual food discovery at the raid front, since raids can advance over areas without food. Most raids extend from trunk trails, which originate when the basal trail of a raid remains in use even after the original raid has ceased. Trunk trails can last at least as long as 10 weeks, with the terrain and the distance to the nest influencing the trail stability. Territories are limited to the trail systems, with rich food items in particular being vigorously defended. Group hunting permits P. diversus to quickly harvest booty, usurp foods from competing species, and capture large prey. This strategy is compared with the raiding strategies of other ants. I hypothesize that group hunting originated from an ancestor which hunted solitarily from trunk trails through the acceleration of trail production and reduction in worker autonomy.
Keywords:Pheidologeton diversus  Myrmicinae  army ant  group hunting  swarm raid  column raid  trunk trail  foraging strategy
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