Submitted by DanieleJava t3_xtkth9 in askscience
wubrgess t1_iqquv25 wrote
Reply to comment by Reviewingremy in How do ants find their way back "home"? by DanieleJava
They also count and retrace their steps
nightzirch t1_iqsavyz wrote
This some scientists discovered by giving the ants stilts. Think about that. Someone thought of it, someone designed and made the tiniest stilts, then someone had to put them on some ants.
cr34th0r t1_iqsf80b wrote
Even with stilts, how did they prove that the ant counts its steps?
Etiennera t1_iqsgorj wrote
With stilts each step is longer. The ants would make the same amount of steps thus overshooting on the return.
trustmeimadoctordk t1_iqsnkhh wrote
And crazy enough, they had a stilts, no stilts, and a amputated half the legs group, and the ones with half sized legs undershot their target. I just cant help but wonder if the amputated ants got the stilts afterwards.....
cr34th0r t1_iqxopl1 wrote
Sounds kinda brutal to amputate some legs just to triple-check that your hypothesis is correct.
[deleted] t1_iqsfexb wrote
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[deleted] t1_iqsuwgv wrote
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amaurea t1_iqy7hau wrote
This was found for desert ants, but I haven't heard of it being shown for other ants. Can any experts here say if it's thought that step counting is an important mechanisms for ants in general?
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