Adventures among Ants. Mark W. Moffett
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Other experiments confirmed this behavior: ants picking up seeds took the direction of any passersby with food (and if there were none, they could go either direction). Were they being physically forced to go the same way, bystanders compelled to join a mob? No—the seeds weren’t bulky enough, and the carriers weren’t numerous enough, to inhibit ants from going whichever way they wanted.31 Instead, it appeared the food-bearing ants were taking notice of each other’s choices and deciding accordingly.32
As it turns out, this “go with the flow” approach is essential to the marauders’ response to bedlam. Crush a marauder ant underfoot, and some workers, detecting alarm pheromones released by the body, rush off the trail on patrols in which they attack whatever they find. While the patrollers are in defense mode, the food-bearing ants do an about-face, clearing the disturbed area by rushing outbound along the trail instead of continuing to the nest. As laden ants farther along the trail confront this backflow, they turn and join the exodus, in this case propelled away from the nest by the urgent multitudes.
If the laden backtrackers reach the trail’s end, they mill about before starting back to the nest. Usually they don’t get that far: as the fleeing ants spread out more and more along the trail, their frantic pace slows to a normal gait, and they gradually start to turn around again under the influence of all the workers carrying food in the “correct,” nest-bound direction. In either case, by the time the ants return to the point on the trail where the fracas took place—anywhere from five to twenty minutes later—the problem is long gone and the patrolling has all but ceased. It’s now safe to go home.
Except in such emergency situations, traffic on busy marauder ant trails is well organized so as to avoid congestion. The scheme isn’t to stay to the right or left, as on human thoroughfares. Rather, nest-bound ants tend to use the trail center, while the outbound ants stay to the sides. The center is easiest to travel, being concave from use, with few obstructions and the most concentrated pheromone. The inbound ants with their unwieldy loads end up there because they have difficulty maneuvering. Carrying nothing, outbound ants can quickly move to the sides of a trail to avoid their encumbered sisters. Similarly efficient patterns emerge among people, too. Think of how pedestrians will be diverted to the gutter as they try to circle around someone hefting a big package on a crowded sidewalk.33 And during rush hour, without anyone thinking it out, clusters of pedestrians will move in alternative directions through bottlenecks—a pattern I have seen in marauder ants as well, where their routes head through a bottleneck underground.34
4 infrastructure
Through my camera lens, I closed in on a gray Diacamma worker with an elegant silver sheen striding along with what appeared to be a sense of purpose. I tracked her ascent of an embankment of soft soil. She went over the top and landed squarely among marauder ants following a trunk trail on the other side. Six minor workers pinned her in place as workers laden with food retreated; then a major arrived and executed her with a crushing blow, discarding the corpse just off the trail, where several minors buried her in the dirt as their food delivery operations resumed.
Marauder colonies maintain a fast, steady, well-protected flow of food and labor on their trails. Whereas small ant colonies, like people in small societies, are able to access and distribute the supplies they need without roads, larger groups depend on an infrastructure so complex that in the marauder ant it rivals human highway systems. The idea of a superorganism applies here, of course: whereas a microscopic organism like a microbe can rely on simple diffusion to distribute nutrients through its body, a large one, such as a human being, needs a circulatory system.1
A marauder ant major worker hefting a Diacamma ant killed after intruding on the colony’s trunk trail. The discarded corpse was buried by the minor workers.
ROADS
Marauder colonies avoid both gridlock and species confrontations, like that with the Diacamma worker, when trails are in good shape. Highway construction efforts are part of the society’s logistics, providing supply lines for fresh combatants on the front lines as well as streamlined routes for bringing home the plunder.2 Trunk trails are well looked after—that’s how they can be distinguished from the fleeting paths created by raids.
Each worker size class participates in the creation of the roadways. All the castes eliminate surface irregularities along a trunk: while the medias and majors chisel out embedded roots and pebbles, minor workers extract grains of soil, establishing the road’s slightly concave shape in cross section. The dross is discarded along the edges of the trail, where it accumulates in embankments like the one the Diacamma walked over. When the ground is moist, the minor and media workers build up the ramparts into a complete soil cover, or thin-roofed arcade, fabricated from soil extracted from the trail surface or from mining shafts—blind-ended tunnels near the trail used specifically as quarries.
Members of the construction crews expend their efforts foraging for building material rather than food. It is likely that no communiqués pass among them.3 Rather, like compulsive bricklayers unable to go by an unfinished wall, passing ants respond to the ongoing building project, and the structures emerge without any active collaboration. The portions of the walls that are suitably positioned and shaped along a trail attract the most attention from passersby bearing soil bits. As a result, the arcades rise to completion where they are most needed, without a blueprint, and damage to them later is repaired without fuss.
Accomplishing large projects without communications is called stigmergy. The marauders’ approach to building has been duplicated by robotics experts, who have discovered that it’s cheaper and easier to achieve a goal such as piling up small objects with a group of simple robots responding to the work done thus far than with one large, more intelligent robot.4 Stigmergy is at work in such websites as Wikipedia and Google as well, where many people add their insights to the statements and choices of others.5
Major workers of the marauder ant serve the role that humans reserve for heavy-duty construction equipment. I have called the largest of these individuals “giants” since the day I first saw one lumber from that nest in Sullia to the cheers of Mr. Beeramoidin and other forestry officials. Imagine a man and an elephant working together to build a road; the size difference between the giant and the minor worker is nearly ten times that great.
Relatively scarce, the giants tackle jobs that, though infrequent, require their prowess. While the smaller ants are so omnipresent that their jobs invariably get done, removing just a couple of giants from the work crew can cause a trail to degrade.6 Fallen objects such as twigs and leaves snarl traffic and must be cleared for the roadway to remain open for use. When one of these giants arrives at such an obstacle, she pushes beneath it, then lifts her head high while standing on tiptoe. Ultimately, she shoves the object to one side, if not on the first attempt, then on the second or third, in a manner similar to that used by elephants to clear human paths.
When the soil roofs of the arcades sag, the large marauder ants respond to the pressure against their heads as they pass underneath with the shoving technique as well. Captain Charles Thomas Bingham,