Communication by Tandem Running in the Ant Genus Cardiocondyla

During field work in Puerto Rico in June,196o, the author had the opportunity to study a hitherto little known form of communication among worker ants. This behavior, which for convenience might be called tandem running, involves the movement outward from the nest of closely coupled tandem pairs, an...

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Main Author: Edward O. Wilson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 1959-01-01
Series:Psyche: A Journal of Entomology
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/1959/29093
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author Edward O. Wilson
author_facet Edward O. Wilson
author_sort Edward O. Wilson
collection DOAJ
description During field work in Puerto Rico in June,196o, the author had the opportunity to study a hitherto little known form of communication among worker ants. This behavior, which for convenience might be called tandem running, involves the movement outward from the nest of closely coupled tandem pairs, and it apparently functions as a substitute or trail-laying to recruit fellow workers to food sources. On Puerto Rico, tandem running was studied more fully in the species Cardiocondyla venustula Wheeler but was also observed in a second member of the genus, C. emeryi Forel.
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series Psyche: A Journal of Entomology
spelling doaj-art-877d6d81072f4e6b87204ff4cfb542be2025-02-03T07:26:05ZengWileyPsyche: A Journal of Entomology0033-26151687-74381959-01-01663293410.1155/1959/29093Communication by Tandem Running in the Ant Genus CardiocondylaEdward O. Wilson0Biological Laboratories, Harvard University, USADuring field work in Puerto Rico in June,196o, the author had the opportunity to study a hitherto little known form of communication among worker ants. This behavior, which for convenience might be called tandem running, involves the movement outward from the nest of closely coupled tandem pairs, and it apparently functions as a substitute or trail-laying to recruit fellow workers to food sources. On Puerto Rico, tandem running was studied more fully in the species Cardiocondyla venustula Wheeler but was also observed in a second member of the genus, C. emeryi Forel.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/1959/29093
spellingShingle Edward O. Wilson
Communication by Tandem Running in the Ant Genus Cardiocondyla
Psyche: A Journal of Entomology
title Communication by Tandem Running in the Ant Genus Cardiocondyla
title_full Communication by Tandem Running in the Ant Genus Cardiocondyla
title_fullStr Communication by Tandem Running in the Ant Genus Cardiocondyla
title_full_unstemmed Communication by Tandem Running in the Ant Genus Cardiocondyla
title_short Communication by Tandem Running in the Ant Genus Cardiocondyla
title_sort communication by tandem running in the ant genus cardiocondyla
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/1959/29093
work_keys_str_mv AT edwardowilson communicationbytandemrunningintheantgenuscardiocondyla