Behavioral ecology of odometric memories in desert ants: acquisition, retention, and integration |
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Authors: | Cheng Ken; Narendra Ajay; Wehner Rudiger |
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Institution: | a Centre for the Integrative Study of Animal Behaviour, Macquarie University, Sydney, New South Wales 2109, Australia, b Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, New South Wales 2109, Australia, and c Department of Zoology, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland |
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Abstract: | Assuming that the acquisition and retention of memories havecosts, properties of memories should fit the functional requirementsfor the system of memory. Based on a functional analysis ofwhat path integration is meant to do, we predicted that odometricmemories in desert ants should show (1) little improvement withrepeated training: performance should be as good after one trainingtrial as after six training trials, (2) decay of memory after24 h, and (3) performance based solely on the most recent outboundtrip, with no integration over multiple memories. Desert ants(Cataglyphis fortis) traveled in narrow straight plastic channelsto forage for cookie crumbs in a feeder at 6- or 12-m distance.Each ant was tested once by being taken from the feeder andreleased 2 m from the end of a 32-m channel to run home. Thedistance at which the ant first turned back (first turn) constitutedthe data. In acquisition, groups trained one or six times beforebeing tested had unsystematic scatter that did not differ significantly.In retention, ants tested after a 24-h delay showed larger unsystematicscatter than control animals tested after no delay. In integration,ants were trained five times at 6 or 12 m and then tested at12 or 6 m, respectively. No evidence of integration of multipleodometric memories was found. The results show that the propertiesof odometric memories are indeed tailored to what the memorysystem is used for. |
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Keywords: | acquisition desert ants integration memory odometry retention |
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