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2.
Learn Behav ; 50(1): 71-81, 2022 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34918204

ABSTRACT

Previous research in our laboratories has demonstrated that, within each colony of Cataglyphis piliscapa (formerly C. cursor) ants, only some individuals are capable of performing a complex sequence of behavioral patterns to free trapped nestmates-a sequence that not only is memory-dependent but also is responsive to the particular circumstances of that entrapment and how the rescue operation unfolds. Additionally, this rescue behavior is inherited patrilineally from but a few of the many males that fertilize the eggs of the colony's single queen. Here, we describe three experiments to explore rescue behavior further-namely, whether rescuers are in any way selective about which nestmates they help, how the age of rescuers and the victims that they help affect the quantity and quality of the rescue operation, and when this complex behavior first emerges in an ant's development. Taken together with the previous heritability analysis, these behavioral experiments provide clear evidence that the ability to rescue nestmates in distress should be recognized as a specialization, which together with other specialized tasks in C. piliscapa, contributes to a division of labor that increases the efficiency of the colony as a whole and, thus increases its reproductive success.


Subject(s)
Ants , Emergency Responders , Animals , Behavior, Animal , Humans , Male , Social Behavior
3.
Behav Processes ; 139: 12-18, 2017 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28215553

ABSTRACT

The experimental study of rescue behaviour in ants, behaviour in which individuals help entrapped nestmates in distress, has revealed that rescuers respond to victims with very precisely targeted behaviour. In Cataglyphis cursor, several different components of rescue behaviour have been observed, demonstrating the complexity of this behaviour, including sand digging and sand transport to excavate the victim, followed by pulling on the victim's limbs as well as the object holding the victim in place, behaviour that serves to free the victim. Although previous work suggested that rescue was optimally organized, first to expose and then to extricate the victim under a variety of differing circumstances, experimental analysis of that organization has been lacking. Here, using experimental data, we characterize the pattern of individual rescue behaviour in C. cursor by analysing the probabilities of transitions from one behavioural component to another. The results show that the execution of each behavioural component is determined by the interplay of previous acts. In particular, we show not only that ants move sand away from the victim in an especially efficient sequence of behaviour that greatly minimizes energy expenditure, but also that ants appear to form some kind of memory of what they did in the past, a memory that directs their future behaviour.


Subject(s)
Ants/physiology , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Goals , Learning/physiology , Memory/physiology , Neuronal Plasticity/physiology , Animals , Social Behavior
4.
Integr Zool ; 8 Suppl 1: 1-8, 2013 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23621466

ABSTRACT

The common spiny mouse (Acomys cahirinus) inhibits the foraging activity of the golden spiny mouse (A. russatus). These two sympatric species of spiny mice, which are considered habitat competitors, occur in extreme arid environments. To test this theory of competition, the influence of urinary odors of both conspecific and heterospecific mice on the foraging behavior of A. russatus was studied under controlled laboratory conditions. Twenty adult males, born in captivity and unfamiliar to the odors of the donor mice, were tested in 3 experimental conditions choosing between 2 seed patches that were scented with urine of either heterospecifics (A. cahirinus), conspecifics (A. russatus) or controls (odors of the tested individual). Of the 20 males, 12 were also tested with urine of unfamiliar gerbils, bushy-tailed jird, considered as competitors in the field. Both conspecific and heterospecific urine samples from Acomys significantly reduced foraging behavior of A. russatus when compared to the control odor. The inhibitory effect of the Acomys urine does not result from the novelty of chemical stimuli of the urine because no effect was shown with unfamiliar gerbil urine. The findings are in accordance with the general theory that A. cahirinus dominates the foraging activity of A. russatus. We hypothesize that chemical cues in the urine of Acomys spp. might induce a negative effect on the foraging behavior of A. russatus.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal/physiology , Murinae/physiology , Odorants , Urine , Animals , Environment , Feeding Behavior/physiology , Male , Pheromones/urine , Sex Characteristics
5.
PLoS One ; 7(11): e48516, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23144897

ABSTRACT

Division of labor, an adaptation in which individuals specialize in performing tasks necessary to the colony, such as nest defense and foraging, is believed key to eusocial insects' remarkable ecological success. Here we report, for the first time, a completely novel specialization in a eusocial insect, namely the ability of Cataglyphis cursor ants to rescue a trapped nestmate using precisely targeted behavior. Labeled "precision rescue", this behavior involves the ability of rescuers not only to detect what, exactly, holds the victim in place, but also to direct specific actions to this obstacle. Individual ants, sampled from each of C. cursor's three castes, namely foragers, nurses and inactives, were experimentally ensnared (the "victim") and exposed to a caste-specific group of potential "rescuers." The data reveal that foragers were able to administer, and obtain, the most help while members of the youngest, inactive caste not only failed to respond to victims, but also received virtually no help from potential rescuers, regardless of caste. Nurses performed intermediate levels of aid, mirroring their intermediate caste status. Our results demonstrate that division of labor, which controls foraging, defense and brood care in C. cursor, also regulates a newly discovered behavior in this species, namely a sophisticated form of rescue, a highly adaptive specialization that is finely tuned to a caste member's probability of becoming, or encountering, a victim in need of rescue.


Subject(s)
Behavior, Animal/physiology , Ecosystem , Silicon Dioxide , Social Behavior , Animals , Ants , Time Factors
6.
PLoS One ; 4(8): e6573, 2009 Aug 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19672292

ABSTRACT

Although helping behavior is ubiquitous throughout the animal kingdom, actual rescue activity is particularly rare. Nonetheless, here we report the first experimental evidence that ants, Cataglyphis cursor, use precisely directed rescue behavior to free entrapped victims; equally important, they carefully discriminate between individuals in distress, offering aid only to nestmates. Our experiments simulate a natural situation, which we often observed in the field when collecting Catagyphis ants, causing sand to collapse in the process. Using a novel experimental technique that binds victims experimentally, we observed the behavior of separate, randomly chosen groups of 5 C. cursor nestmates under one of six conditions. In five of these conditions, a test stimulus (the "victim") was ensnared with nylon thread and held partially beneath the sand. The test stimulus was either (1) an individual from the same colony; (2) an individual from a different colony of C cursor; (3) an ant from a different ant species; (4) a common prey item; or, (5) a motionless (chilled) nestmate. In the final condition, the test stimulus (6) consisted of the empty snare apparatus. Our results demonstrate that ants are able to recognize what, exactly, holds their relative in place and direct their behavior to that object, the snare, in particular. They begin by excavating sand, which exposes the nylon snare, transporting sand away from it, and then biting at the snare itself. Snare biting, a behavior never before reported in the literature, demonstrates that rescue behavior is far more sophisticated, exact and complexly organized than the simple forms of helping behavior already known, namely limb pulling and sand digging. That is, limb pulling and sand digging could be released directly by a chemical call for help and thus result from a very simple mechanism. However, it's difficult to see how this same releasing mechanism could guide rescuers to the precise location of the nylon thread, and enable them to target their bites to the thread itself.


Subject(s)
Ants/physiology , Behavior, Animal , Animals
7.
Therapie ; 58(6): 525-9, 2003.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15058497

ABSTRACT

The aim of this study was to explore the frequency and type of adverse drug reactions between January and June 2001 in hospitalised patients. A prospective study was conducted in two pneumology departments of public hospitals in the Seine-Saint-Denis area. Adverse drug reactions were collected by hospital pharmacists after spontaneous notification by nurses and physicians, except for deliberate drug overdose. The drugs implicated, causality and the severity of each adverse drug reaction were analysed. The mean age of patients was 69 +/- 15 years (63% male and 37% female). The total sample comprised 1598 patients. During the period of the study, 190 patients experienced at least one adverse drug reaction. This amounts to a prevalence of 12% (95% confidence interval [95% CI: 7.4-16.6%). The percentage of severe adverse effects was 28.4% (95% CI: 25.1-31.6%) and adverse reactions were rated avoidable in 35.8% of cases (95% CI: 32.3-39.3%). Antibiotics (23%), corticosteroids (15%), analgesics (13%) and anticoagulants (9%) were the drugs most frequently implicated in adverse effects. Preventable adverse drug events were more serious than non-preventable adverse events (p = 0.001). With regard to the level of severity, antibiotics, corticosteroids and bronchodilators were associated with a low severity level, whereas anticoagulants and antineoplastics were associated with a high severity level.


Subject(s)
Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions , Hospital Units , Pulmonary Medicine , Aged , Female , France , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
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