It is widely known that the ants keep the line with the help
of trails marked by chemicals from their body called pheromones to reach the
destination. However, a new research has revealed another method, called tandem running
found among Diacamma indicum ants
-a species found in Sri Lanka and India - being used in colony
relocation.
Tandem run is a reason why you find ants doing something like
shaking hands with each other. To initiate
a tandem run, a leader ant, often an adult, will repeatedly make antenna
contact with a potential follower. Then turning around by 180 degrees, the
tandem leader will provide her abdomen to the follower. The follower will then touch
the abdomen of the leader with the antennae signaling that she is ready for the
move. Thus the pair moves to the nest all the while keeping continuous physical
contact.
You believe it or not,
ant colonies were found taking almost same time to relocate to new nests in
this way, no matter what distance they cover. The study found one ant colony which
moved to a shorter distance destination taking as much time as another which traveled
to a distance six times farther. To adjust this, during long distance
relocations, more worker ants took the role of leaders initiating tandem run
which in effect made the relocation faster for the whole colony.
It was also
observed that D. indicum ants allow only the broods and males to be followers,
and they never swap leaders and followers during a tandem run.
Interestingly, D.
indicum ants don’t have an egg-laying queen, unlike many other ant species.
The egg-laying role is taken by a worker ant called gamer-gate. During relocation,
the gamer-gate was either tandem run or self explored to the new nest without
company of retinue, unlike the queen ants in other species.
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