508 lines
25 KiB
Markdown
508 lines
25 KiB
Markdown
# food quality perception and evaluation in ants
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reference doc for food quality mechanics in the simulation. all claims sourced
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from published research. confidence levels noted where information is
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extrapolated or less well-established.
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## 1. sensory detection: what ants can taste
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### sensory organs
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ants detect food using gustatory (taste) sensilla distributed across multiple
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body parts. the primary taste organs are:
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- **foreleg tarsi** — contact chemoreceptors. in fire ants (Solenopsis invicta),
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the foreleg tarsi play a MORE important role in sucrose detection than the
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antennal flagellum. sensilla chaetica, trichoid II, and basiconica I/II all
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have a clear pore at their tip for chemoreception.
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- **antennal flagellum** — both olfactory and gustatory sensilla. used for
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close-range assessment and during trophallaxis.
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- **maxillary and labial palps** — mouthpart sensilla for evaluation during
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ingestion.
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- **pharynx** — internal gustatory sensilla that evaluate food as it enters the
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crop.
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**confidence: high** — well-established insect morphology, confirmed across
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multiple ant species.
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### gustatory receptor (GR) genes
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the number of GR genes varies by species and correlates with dietary breadth:
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| species | common name | GR genes |
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|--------------------------|---------------------|----------|
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| Linepithema humile | Argentine ant | 96 |
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| Apis mellifera | honeybee | 10 |
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| Drosophila melanogaster | fruit fly | 68 |
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ant GR genes fall into four clades: CO2 receptors, GR43a-like (internal
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fructose/nutrient sensors), sugar receptors, and bitter receptors. generalist
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species tend to have expanded bitter receptor families, presumably broadening
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the range of plant secondary metabolites they can detect.
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**confidence: high** — genomic data from sequenced ant genomes.
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### sugars
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**preference hierarchy**: sucrose > glucose >> fructose (in fire ants)
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- fire ant workers strongly prefer sucrose and glucose but show only weak
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attraction to fructose.
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- SinvGr43a is a fructose-responsive gustatory receptor in S. invicta, but it
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acts primarily as an INTERNAL nutrient sensor (linked to neuropeptide
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regulation and lipid metabolism) rather than a peripheral taste receptor.
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- concentration matters: ants discriminate between sucrose concentrations.
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1.0 M sucrose elicits strong behavioral responses (trail-laying, feeding),
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while 0.01 M sucrose does not. in Lasius niger experiments, 0.2 M sucrose
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led to lower food acceptance than 1.0 M.
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- threshold detection in related insects: ~10 mM for antennal sensilla,
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~100 mM for tarsal sensilla (moth data — ant-specific thresholds likely
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similar order of magnitude but not precisely established).
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**confidence: high** for preference hierarchy and concentration discrimination.
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moderate for exact threshold values in ants specifically.
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### amino acids and proteins
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- ants discriminate essential amino acids (EAAs) from non-essential ones.
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- when deficient in both carbs and EAAs and offered sucrose+EAA vs
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sucrose+non-EAA solutions, ants focused foraging on the EAA solution
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regardless of amino acid:carbohydrate ratio.
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- S. invicta workers showed strong preference for leucine (an EAA) over other
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tested amino acids, with preference intensifying at higher concentrations.
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- when choosing between high-protein foods, ants preferred free amino acids
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over whole proteins. no preference emerged with high-carb foods.
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**confidence: high** — multiple controlled experiments across species.
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### salts and minerals
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- Solenopsis richteri workers prefer zinc, magnesium, and ammonium.
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- sodium preference varies and shows a geographical gradient: ants farther from
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the ocean consume more sodium. non-predatory species consume more sodium than
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predatory species (predators get sodium from prey).
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- salts and acids are attractive at low concentrations but aversive at high
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concentrations (inverted U response curve).
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**confidence: high** — field and lab studies.
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### toxins and deterrents
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- quinine is aversive to Lasius niger.
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- high concentrations of caffeine in sucrose reduced feeding in Oecophylla
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smaragdina (weaver ants).
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- alkaloids reduced feeding in Ectatomma ruidum.
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- leaf-cutter ants (Atta, Acromyrmex) avoid leaves containing anti-fungal
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terpenoids that would harm their cultivar fungus.
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**confidence: high** — behavioral assays with known compounds.
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## 2. nutritional assessment and post-ingestive feedback
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### speed of assessment
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ants can compensate for nutritional deficiencies in their colony in under 10
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minutes. this is fast enough that it likely involves rapid nutrient sensing
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rather than slow learning/feedback loops.
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### post-ingestive feedback mechanism
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the term "post-ingestive feedback" refers to the process by which nutrients
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interact with receptors on enteroendocrine cells in the gut after ingestion.
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these cells secrete hormones that signal the brain and other tissues about
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nutrient composition, food texture, and meal size.
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mechanistic details (primarily from Drosophila, likely conserved in ants):
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- Dh44 neurons are necessary and sufficient for post-ingestive nutrient sensing
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- gut-to-brain signaling uses neuropeptide pathways
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- the internal fructose sensor GR43a (mentioned above) is part of this system,
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linking circulating nutrient levels to feeding behavior and lipid metabolism
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**confidence: moderate** — the gut-sensor mechanism is well-established in
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Drosophila. the specific molecular pathways in ants are inferred by homology
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rather than directly demonstrated. the behavioral outcomes (rapid compensation)
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are directly measured in ants.
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### learning and memory about food quality
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- ants can learn which foods are nutritious vs empty calories. foraging
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motivation and food quality affect both route memory formation speed and the
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likelihood of returning to a food source.
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- two parameters dominate quality assessment at a food site:
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1. **amount of food available** — initially dominates the decision to return
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2. **reliability of food encounter** — takes precedence after a few visits
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- ants may learn the location of higher-quality food faster, with most ants
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eventually congregating at the best source.
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**confidence: high** — direct behavioral experiments.
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## 3. the geometric framework for nutrition
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### core concept
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the geometric framework (developed by Simpson & Raubenheimer) models nutrition
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as a multi-dimensional space where each axis represents a nutrient. animals have
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an "intake target" — an optimal point in this space — and regulate their feeding
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to approach it.
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### how it applies to ant colonies
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- colonies have separate appetites for protein and carbohydrate, enabling them
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to compensate for changes in nutrient density and to select among
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nutritionally complementary foods.
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- **workers need carbohydrates** (energy for foraging, maintenance).
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- **larvae need protein** (growth, development).
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- this creates a fundamental tension: the colony must collect both, but the
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ratio shifts with brood load.
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### colony-level regulation
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- in Monomorium pharaonis (pharaoh's ant), colonies defended a slightly
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carbohydrate-biased intake target.
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- when confined to imbalanced protein:carbohydrate (P:C) diets, colonies used a
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"generalist equal-distance strategy": overharvesting BOTH protein and
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carbohydrate to reach the target ratio, rather than prioritizing one.
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- ants regulate macronutrient intake at both individual and colony levels,
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maintaining their specific elemental body composition.
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### what happens when the balance is off
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- when carbohydrate-supplemented, fire ant colonies consumed less cricket and
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specifically avoided high-lipid ovaries.
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- when amino-acid-supplemented, they consumed less male cricket (lower lipid,
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higher protein).
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- this demonstrates independent regulation of at least protein, carbohydrate,
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and lipid.
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**confidence: high** — the geometric framework is well-validated across multiple
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ant species and other social insects.
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## 4. food quality and recruitment behavior
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### the pharaoh's ant baseline (Monomorium pharaonis)
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- trail-marking ants deposited significantly more pheromone when returning from
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high-quality food (1.0 M sucrose) vs low-quality food (0.01 M sucrose).
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- at low food quality, there was no significant difference in marking intensity
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between fed and unfed trail-marking ants — the quality signal disappeared.
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### Lasius niger (black garden ant)
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- deposits up to 22x more pheromone within 10 cm of a food source compared to
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near the nest.
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- uses an all-or-nothing individual response to food quality (binary: mark or
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don't mark), which contrasts with Pharaoh's ant graded response.
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- L. niger is proficient at visual-based orientation, so it's less reliant on
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pheromone trails than pharaoh's ants.
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- the presence of existing pheromone trails does NOT influence an individual
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ant's subjective reward evaluation — they assess food quality independently.
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### general principles across species
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- the more rewarding a food source, the higher the pheromone concentration on
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the trail.
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- some species use multiple pheromones: a long-lasting exploration pheromone
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(weak recruitment) and a shorter-lasting exploitation pheromone (strong
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recruitment). the exploitation pheromone is deposited preferentially for
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high-quality food.
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### tandem running (Temnothorax spp.)
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- tandem running is a one-to-one recruitment method where a leader guides a
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follower from nest to food.
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- tandem running is favored when food sources are hard to find, differ in
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energetic value, and are long-lasting.
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- colonies can adaptively allocate foragers across sources of different quality
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using tandem running.
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- followers learn specific routes from leaders — 90% of tandem leaders guided
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followers along routes they had originally learned as followers themselves.
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- gene expression: learning and memory genes are specifically upregulated in
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scouts and tandem-followers.
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### response to environmental change
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- ants strongly upregulate pheromone deposition immediately after experiencing
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an environmental change (e.g., food source moves or changes quality).
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- VULNERABILITY: pheromone-based positive feedback can trap colonies at local
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optima. if a poor feeder is established first, the pheromone trail can
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outcompete incipient trails to a better source added later. this is a known
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failure mode of stigmergic systems.
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**confidence: high** — extensive experimental literature across species.
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## 5. food source evaluation and decision-making
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### comparing multiple food sources
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- ants integrate food quality with foraging cost (distance, danger).
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- the marginal value theorem (MVT) predicts: leave a food patch when the
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current rate of energy gain drops to the average expected rate for the habitat.
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- in practice: ants stay longer at patches that are farther apart or when
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current patches are poor (both increase travel-cost-to-benefit ratio).
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### distance vs quality tradeoff
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- closer low-quality food vs farther high-quality food: ants can get trapped at
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the closer source due to pheromone positive feedback (see vulnerability above).
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- learning speed differences help: ants learn routes to higher-quality food
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faster, which can partially overcome the distance disadvantage.
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- small differences in learning speed for different food qualities can drive
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efficient collective foraging at the colony level.
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### memory and reassessment
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- ants DO remember food source locations and quality.
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- assessment updates over multiple visits — initial visits weight "amount of
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food" heavily, later visits weight "reliability" more.
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- private information (individual memory) can sometimes trap colonies at local
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optima, independent of pheromone effects.
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- ants do NOT appear to actively correct erroneous pheromone trails — trails
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decay naturally rather than being "erased."
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**confidence: high** for behavioral patterns. the MVT application to ants is
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well-supported theoretically but ants don't perfectly optimize — they use
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heuristics that approximate MVT predictions.
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## 6. trophallaxis and food quality communication
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### what gets transferred
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trophallactic fluid in Camponotus floridanus contains far more than just food:
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- **nutrients** — sugars, amino acids, lipids
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- **proteins** — both digestion-related and non-digestion-related. many are
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regulators of growth, development, and behavioral maturation.
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- **juvenile hormone III (JH)** — a key developmental regulator. when workers'
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food was supplemented with JH, larvae they reared via trophallaxis were TWICE
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as likely to complete metamorphosis and became larger workers.
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- **JH esterase paralogs** — enzymes that break down JH, providing a
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regulatory counterbalance.
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- **cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs)** — nestmate recognition cues.
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- **small RNAs (microRNAs)** — potential gene expression regulators.
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### quality information transfer
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- food receivers perceive the odor of food delivered by the donor and associate
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it with the food reward.
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- through individual experience, workers evaluate the characteristic information
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of food and assess its quality.
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- social information can OVERRIDE individual assessment: carpenter ants
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receiving social instructions will consume food they would otherwise reject,
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even toxic food, despite noxious effects. social instruction overrides
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individual evaluation.
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### the crop as a social stomach
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- the crop (foregut) stores liquids separately from the midgut.
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- food intended for sharing is kept available for trophallaxis without being
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fully digested.
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- this allows ants to act as mobile food storage and distribution units.
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**confidence: high** — proteomic and molecular analysis of trophallactic fluid
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is well-established, particularly in Camponotus floridanus.
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## 7. species-specific food quality concerns
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### fire ants (Solenopsis invicta)
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- omnivorous, regulate protein/carb/lipid independently.
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- prefer sucrose and leucine, with preference intensifying at higher
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concentrations.
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- prefer single-component solutions over multi-component mixtures.
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- larvae display independent appetites for solid protein, amino acid solution,
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and sucrose solution.
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- when infected with SINV-1 virus: reduced foraging, declined lipid intake,
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shifted preference toward carbohydrate-rich foods.
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### leaf-cutter ants (Atta, Acromyrmex)
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food quality is evaluated at TWO levels: for the ant AND for the fungal
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cultivar.
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- **leaf selection criteria**: plant chemistry, nutrient content, tenderness,
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vein thickness, trichome density, endophyte load.
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- prefer young leaves with soft cuticles, fewer defenses, higher nutritional
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value.
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- **fungal feedback**: ants detect chemical signals from the fungus. if a leaf
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type is toxic to the fungus, the colony stops collecting it. this is a
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learned colony-level response.
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- fungus gardens preferentially break down simpler, more digestible substrates
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first.
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- the fungus produces specific enzyme profiles in response to different plant
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substrates (different protein expression for different leaves).
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- foraged material (fruits, flowers, leaves) is combined to maximize cultivar
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performance — a multidimensional nutritional optimization.
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- trace mineral management: concentrations of toxic trace minerals (Cu, Mn, Zn)
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in foraged leaves peak near the macronutrient intake target, suggesting
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active regulation of micronutrient toxicity.
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### harvester ants (Pogonomyrmex spp.)
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- seed specialists. selection based on multiple factors:
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- caloric reward (energy density)
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- seed size (prefer 3-30 mg in P. rugosus)
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- protein and energy content (P. salinus preferentially selects
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Lepidium papilliferum seeds for their higher protein/energy content)
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- handling time and travel cost
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- individual foraging choices are labile — converge on the most energetically
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profitable species over time.
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- colony dietary history influences individual seed preferences.
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### honeypot ants (Myrmecocystus spp.)
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- specialized repletes (living storage vessels) store liquid carbohydrates.
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- foragers collect sweet exudates from cynipid galls and regurgitate to repletes
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via trophallaxis.
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- replete honey composition: primarily glucose and fructose, ~67g sugar per
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100g, pH 3.85.
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- the crop keeps food separated from the midgut so it remains available for
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redistribution without being digested.
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- when food is scarce, the process reverses: repletes regurgitate stored sugar
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to feed the colony.
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### Temnothorax spp. (acorn/rock ants)
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- use tandem running rather than mass recruitment.
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- stored excess food is sufficient for reducing protein foraging — colonies with
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food reserves are less responsive to protein opportunities.
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- small colonies respond more strongly to larval demand signals than large ones.
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**confidence: high for fire ants and leaf-cutters** (extensively studied).
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moderate for harvester ants (good behavioral data, less molecular detail).
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moderate for honeypot ants (descriptive natural history is solid, mechanistic
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data is thinner).
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## 8. larval nutritional signaling
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### the demand chain
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nutritional information flows through a hierarchical demand chain:
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larvae → nurses → foragers → environment
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1. **larvae signal hunger** via non-volatile contact pheromones and begging
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behaviors (physical solicitation).
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2. **nurses respond** by soliciting food from foragers or from stored reserves.
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3. **foragers adjust** foraging effort and target macronutrient composition based
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on upstream demand.
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### larval pheromone effects (dose-dependent)
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- workers in colonies WITH larvae increase foraging activity compared to
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broodless colonies.
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- workers suppress ovarian activation in the presence of larvae (progressive
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effect — stronger in smaller colonies).
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- the response is dose-dependent: more larvae = stronger foraging drive +
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stronger ovarian suppression.
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### specificity of demand
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- the chain is nutrient-specific. ants can match foraging to deficiencies in
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single amino acids, suggesting the demand signal carries information about
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WHAT is needed, not just "feed me."
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- workers shift foraging toward protein-rich sources when larval demand is high
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(more brood = more protein foraging).
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- in Temnothorax longispinosus, stored excess food alone is sufficient to reduce
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protein foraging — the colony tracks its reserves.
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### information propagation in large colonies
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- in small colonies, direct larva-worker contact may suffice.
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- in larger colonies, larval pheromones may propagate through the trophallaxis
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network: transferred from nurse to forager via oral fluid exchange, carrying
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the chemical signal deeper into the nest.
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- this is less well-characterized mechanistically than the direct-contact
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pathway.
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**confidence: high** for the existence and behavioral effects of the demand
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chain. moderate for the specific molecular identity of larval hunger pheromones.
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the propagation mechanism in large colonies is plausible but not definitively
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demonstrated.
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## simulation implications
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key parameters to model for food quality in the simulation:
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1. **food quality value (0-255, already allocated in world.R bits 6-13)**
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- maps to sugar concentration / caloric density
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- affects pheromone deposition intensity (graded or binary per species model)
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- affects recruitment strength
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2. **colony nutritional state**
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- protein vs carbohydrate balance (two-axis model from geometric framework)
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- brood load shifts target toward protein
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- deficit in either axis biases forager preferences
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3. **individual forager memory**
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- food source location + quality rating
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- updates over visits (amount → reliability weighting shift)
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- learning speed proportional to food quality
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4. **trophallaxis network effects**
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- quality information propagates through social feeding
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- social information can override individual assessment
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- larval demand propagates upstream through nurses to foragers
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5. **pheromone trail modulation**
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- trail intensity proportional to food quality (above some threshold)
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- dual-pheromone option: exploration (weak, long-lived) vs exploitation
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(strong, short-lived)
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- trap risk: established trails to poor sources resist switching
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6. **distance-quality tradeoff**
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- not a simple linear comparison — pheromone feedback creates path dependence
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- closer poor food can dominate farther good food due to positive feedback
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- learning speed differences partially compensate
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## sources
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- [Preference and effect of gustatory sense on sugar-feeding of fire ants](https://peerj.com/articles/11943/)
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- [A fructose-sensitive gustatory receptor in fire ants](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0965174825001845)
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- [Detection of sweet tastants by insect gustatory receptors](https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3910600/)
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- [Ant foragers compensate for nutritional deficiencies in the colony](https://www.cell.com/current-biology/fulltext/S0960-9822(19)31458-7)
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- [Flexible, but not enough: how an omnivorous ant copes with macronutrient imbalances](https://nsojournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/oik.11557)
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- [Nutritional geometry of Monomorium pharaonis](https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0218764)
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- [Carbohydrate regulation in relation to colony growth](https://journals.biologists.com/jeb/article/211/14/2224/17598/Carbohydrate-regulation-in-relation-to-colony)
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- [Ant nutritional ecology: linking nutritional niche plasticity](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S221457451400090X)
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- [Modulation of pheromone trail strength with food quality in pharaoh's ant](https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0003347207002278)
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- [Lasius niger pheromone deposition near food sources](https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00040-024-00995-y)
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- [Trail pheromone does not modulate subjective reward evaluation in L. niger](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7540218/)
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- [The role of multiple pheromones in food recruitment](https://journals.biologists.com/jeb/article/212/15/2337/18424/The-role-of-multiple-pheromones-in-food)
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- [Trail pheromones of ants (review)](https://resjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1365-3032.2008.00658.x)
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- [Food information acquired socially overrides individual assessment](https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00265-016-2216-x)
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- [Social transmission of information via trophallaxis](https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rspb.2017.1367)
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- [Oral transfer of chemical cues, growth proteins and hormones in social insects](https://elifesciences.org/articles/20375)
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- [Molecular evolution of JH esterase-like proteins in trophallactic fluid](https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-018-36048-1)
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- [Preferences for sugars and amino acids in nectar-feeding ants](https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/j.1365-2656.2004.00789.x)
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- [Effects of macro- and micro-nutrients on feeding responses by ants](https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-024-56133-y)
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- [Dietary diversity, sociality, and the evolution of ant gustation](https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/ecology-and-evolution/articles/10.3389/fevo.2023.1175719/full)
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- [Feeding preferences for sugars and amino acids in fire ants](https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4450/17/3/258)
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- [Regulation of diet in the fire ant](https://link.springer.com/article/10.1023/A:1020835304713)
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- [Route learning during tandem running in Temnothorax](https://journals.biologists.com/jeb/article/223/9/jeb221408/223803/Route-learning-during-tandem-running-in-the-rock)
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- [Teaching in tandem-running ants](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16407943/)
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- [Tandem-running and scouting characterized by learning/memory gene upregulation](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30903719/)
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- [Temnothorax adjusts tandem running when distance exposes them to greater risks](https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00265-018-2453-2)
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- [Ant larvae regulate worker foraging behavior and ovarian activity dose-dependently](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5015688/)
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- [Stored excess food reduces protein foraging in Temnothorax](https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00265-025-03683-4)
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- [Foraging and feeding independently regulated in clonal raider ant](https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00265-021-02985-7)
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- [Ants adjust pheromone deposition to changing environment](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4590477/)
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- [Private information can trap colonies in local feeding optima](https://journals.biologists.com/jeb/article/219/5/744/16615/Private-information-alone-can-trigger-trapping-of)
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- [Small differences in learning speed drive efficient collective foraging](https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00265-018-2583-6)
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- [Re-visiting plentiful food sources in desert ants](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3389614/)
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- [Fungal cultivar of leaf-cutters produces specific enzymes per plant substrate](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5118115/)
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- [Multidimensional nutritional niche of leaf-cutter fungus provisioning](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9292433/)
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- [Evolutionary innovation of nutritional symbioses in leaf-cutters](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4553616/)
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- [Seed selection by Pogonomyrmex rugosus](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27257121/)
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- [Flexible seed selection by Pogonomyrmex occidentalis](https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF00164118)
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- [Honeypot ant (Myrmecocystus) — Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honeypot_ant)
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- [Evolutionary origins of repletism in ants](https://blog.myrmecologicalnews.org/2023/05/31/shedding-light-on-the-evolutionary-origins-of-repletism-in-ants/)
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