Ants go marching using vector navigation

Published: July 22, 2008 at 3:01 PM

ZURICH, Switzerland, July 22 (UPI) -- Ants traveling in the desert's relentlessly featureless terrain use vector navigation to plot their course, researchers at the University of Zurich found.

The strategy allows desert ants to integrate direction, distance and incline as they travel, the scientists said in an article published in Frontiers in Zoology.

In their study of desert ant locomotion performed on differently slanted surfaces, the researchers said they wanted to examine what mechanisms ants used to estimate step length and inclination.

In a related experiment with ants foraging on slippery surfaces, researchers said they were able to separate the relationship between stepping frequency and step length to examine the ants' ability to gauge distances covered those adverse conditions.

Once they removed the effect of speed, the researchers said they demonstrated slope had only a "marginal influence" on their travels.

The researchers said they think sensing mechanisms on the ant's legs could provide the correlation in monitoring inclination and step length.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
UPI Thoroughbred Racing Roundup (58 min)
Your Daily Horoscope
The almanac
NHL: San Jose 4, Vancouver 2
Modest Atlantic hurricane season ends
COL BKB: West Virginia 84, Portland 66
NFL: Baltimore 20, Pittsburgh 17 (OT)
fark
Two dogs in Beijing diagnosed with swine flu, will be treated with soy sauce
Austrian government moves to ban Santa Claus, saying he is a foreign invader who threatens the racial...
Photoshop this piece of paper
When driving your pickup into your ex's house just doesn't send the right message, try setting the...
Organizers of prison raffle realize that offering a first prize of "get out of jail free" may have...
Church finds success using football to bring people to God, because football is real and can change...