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Assessment of nectar flow rate and memory for patch quality in the ant Camponotus rufipes

Abstract

Ants as central place foragers are known to visit repeatedly renewable patches such as extrafloral nectaries, yet the criteria workers use to evaluate their quality, as well as the rules used to decide when to leave the patch, have not been identified. We examined the assessment of nectar flow rate by nectar-feeding ants, Camponotus rufipes. Single workers from a laboratory colony were trained to visit an artificial feeder providing 20% sucrose solution either ad libitum or at controlled flow rates (0.118–2.36 l/min). These flow rates simulate the conditions faced by workers when visiting plant extrafloral nectaries. Ants adjusted their visit times to the different flow rates, so that the time spent at the feeder decreased with increasing nectar flow rates. The volume of nectar collected increased with increasing nectar flow rates, and workers were observed to return to the nest with partially filled crops. To investigate the rules used by ants to decide when to depart from the patch, we confronted experienced workers on their fifth visit with a depleted patch, and recorded the time spent there before leaving. The time depended on the previously experienced flow rate, even though ants always found a depleted patch, indicating that ants arrive at the patch with an expectation about the nectar flow rate, and use as a departure rule an estimate of time that depends on the flow rate previously experienced.

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