Social insects and beyond: The physics of soft, dense invertebrate aggregations

Olga Shishkov, O. Peleg
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Aggregation is a common behavior by which groups of organisms arrange into cohesive groups. Whether suspended in the air (like honey bee clusters), built on the ground (such as army ant bridges), or immersed in water (such as sludge worm blobs), these collectives serve a multitude of biological functions, from protection against predation to the ability to maintain a relatively desirable local environment despite a variable ambient environment. In this review, we survey dense aggregations of a variety of insects, other arthropods, and worms from a soft matter standpoint. An aggregation can be orders of magnitude larger than its individual organisms, consisting of tens to hundreds of thousands of individuals, and yet functions as a coherent entity. Understanding how aggregating organisms coordinate with one another to form a superorganism requires an interdisciplinary approach. We discuss how considering the physics of an aggregation can yield additional insights to those gained from ecological and physiological considerations, given that the aggregating individuals exchange information, energy, and matter continually with the environment and one another. While the connection between animal aggregations and the physics of non-living materials has been proposed since the early 1900s, the recent advent of physics of behavior studies provides new insights into social interactions governed by physical principles. Current efforts focus on eusocial insects; however, we show that these may just be the tip of an iceberg of superorganisms that take advantage of physical interactions and simple behavioral rules to adapt to changing environments. By bringing attention to a wide range of invertebrate aggregations, we wish to inspire a new generation of scientists to explore collective dynamics and bring a deeper understanding of the physics of dense living aggregations.
群居昆虫及其他:柔软、密集的无脊椎动物聚集的物理学
聚集是一种常见的行为,通过这种行为,生物体群体排列成有凝聚力的群体。无论是悬浮在空中(如蜜蜂群),建在地面上(如军蚁桥),还是浸在水中(如污泥虫团),这些集体都有多种生物功能,从防止捕食到在变化的环境中维持相对理想的局部环境的能力。在这篇综述中,我们从软物质的角度调查了各种昆虫、其他节肢动物和蠕虫的密集聚集。一个集合可以比它的个体有机体大几个数量级,由数万到数十万个个体组成,但作为一个连贯的实体运作。理解聚集的有机体如何相互协调形成一个超级有机体需要跨学科的方法。考虑到聚集的个体与环境和彼此之间不断交换信息、能量和物质,我们讨论了考虑聚合的物理如何能够产生从生态和生理考虑中获得的额外见解。早在20世纪初,人们就提出了动物聚集与非生物物质的物理学之间的联系,而最近出现的行为物理学研究为受物理原理支配的社会互动提供了新的见解。目前的研究重点是社会性昆虫;然而,我们表明,这些可能只是利用物理相互作用和简单行为规则来适应不断变化的环境的超级有机体的冰山一角。通过关注广泛的无脊椎动物聚集,我们希望激发新一代科学家探索集体动力学,并对密集生物聚集的物理学有更深的理解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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