Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » Swarms of Locusts Use Social Networking to Communicate
16 July 2011 [16:20] - Today.Az
Social studies of Facebook and Twitter have been adapted to gain a greater understanding of the swarming behaviour of locusts. The enormous success of social networking sites has vividly illustrated the importance of networking for humans; however for some animals, keeping informed about others of their kind is even more important.
In a study published on July 15, 2011, in the Institute of Physics and German Physical Society's New Journal of Physics,
researchers have shown that swarming, a phenomenon that can be crucial
to an animal's survival, is created by the same kind of social networks
that humans adopt.
Since the 1980s, scientists have been programming computer models to
realistically reproduce flocks of birds, schools of fish, herds of
quadrupeds and swarms of insects. However, the question of how these
groups coordinate to move together has remained a mystery.
It remains more of a mystery when each organism can only see a small
area around them, when they are affected by unpredictable changes in the
environment, and when there is no clear leader of the collective
behaviour.
Researchers from the Max Planck Institute for Physics of Complex
Systems, as well as a US-based scientist supported by the National
Science Foundation, addressed this problem from a different perspective:
network science.
They used ideas from previous studies on opinion formation in social
networks, such as Facebook and Twitter, and applied them to a previous
study of 120 locust nymphs marching in a ring-shaped arena in the lab.
Studies have shown that the decisions you make, or the opinion you
have, are strongly influenced by the decisions and opinions of your
friends, or more generally, your contacts in your social network.
Locusts rely heavily on swarming as they are in fact cannibalistic.
As they march across barren deserts, locusts carefully keep track of
each other so they can remain within striking distance to consume one
another -- a cruel, but very efficient, survival strategy.
The study used a computer model to explicitly simulate the social
network among locusts and found that the most important component needed
to reproduce the movements seen in the lab is the social interactions
that occur when locusts, walking in one direction, convince others to
walk in the same direction.
The researchers state that it may not be obvious that animals are
creating the equivalent of our human social networks however this is the
precise mechanism behind swarming transition.
One of the study's authors, Gerd Zschaler, said, "We concluded that
the mechanism through which locusts agree on a direction to move
together (sometimes with devastating consequences, such as locust
plagues) is the same we sometimes use to decide where to live or where
to go out: we let ourselves be convinced by those in our social network,
often by those going in the opposite direction."
"We don't necessarily pay more attention to those doing the same as
us, but many times [we pay more attention] to those doing something
different." /Science Daily/
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