File:Sun-Basking-in-Red-Wood-Ants-Formica-polyctena-(Hymenoptera-Formicidae)-Individual-Behaviour-and-pone.0170570.s002.ogv
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[edit]DescriptionSun-Basking-in-Red-Wood-Ants-Formica-polyctena-(Hymenoptera-Formicidae)-Individual-Behaviour-and-pone.0170570.s002.ogv |
English: Supplementary Material. Thermographic video showing behaviour of ants visiting a hot spot. A hot spot with a cluster of sun-basking ants is visible in the upper left corner (yellow-orange spot), which was generated with an IR lamp in a laboratory setting. In the upper and lower corners on the right, a vessel with water and a food patch are visible (both cold, depicted in dark blue). Two warm ant workers (orange) emerge from the cluster (time 00:00:01:30). They are heading down to the nest entrance (in lower part of screen) and spent some time exploring the bridge leading to the nest entrance (time 00:00:13:50). One of these workers enters the nest (time 00:00:37:05), while the other turns back and return to the hot spot after a while (time 00:01:01:23), joining the ants in the sun-basking cluster (time 00:01:07:15). On the top, a cold ant moves towards the hot spot (time 00:00:42:00), walks around and remains at the cluster, reaching a higher body temperature (00:01:01:00). Please note that ants leaving the hot spot slowly cool down over time, since the false colour is changing from bright orange to red and pink, which represents a temperature change from 23.5 to 21°C. The ants’ gaster cools down slower than other body parts. The thermographic video was taken during preliminary trials performed at ca. 15 ± 1°C ambient temperature. For the experiments presented in the manuscript, only long-term digital videos were used because the tags used to individually mark ants cannot be recognized on thermographic videos, and ambient temperatures were set at 10°C. |
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Date | |||
Source | S1 Video from Kadochová Š, Frouz J, Roces F (2017). "Sun Basking in Red Wood Ants Formica polyctena (Hymenoptera, Formicidae): Individual Behaviour and Temperature-Dependent Respiration Rates". PLOS ONE. DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0170570. PMID 28114396. PMC: 5256898. | ||
Author | Kadochová Š, Frouz J, Roces F | ||
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This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license.
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current | 00:40, 3 March 2017 | 1 min 10 s, 1,280 × 720 (3.1 MB) | Open Access Media Importer Bot (talk | contribs) | Automatically uploaded media file from Open Access source. Please report problems or suggestions here. |
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Short title | Supplementary Material. Thermographic video showing behaviour of ants visiting a hot spot. |
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Author | Kadochová Š, Frouz J, Roces F |
Usage terms | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ |
Image title | A hot spot with a cluster of sun-basking ants is visible in the upper left corner (yellow-orange spot), which was generated with an IR lamp in a laboratory setting. In the upper and lower corners on the right, a vessel with water and a food patch are visible (both cold, depicted in dark blue). Two warm ant workers (orange) emerge from the cluster (time 00:00:01:30). They are heading down to the nest entrance (in lower part of screen) and spent some time exploring the bridge leading to the nest entrance (time 00:00:13:50). One of these workers enters the nest (time 00:00:37:05), while the other turns back and return to the hot spot after a while (time 00:01:01:23), joining the ants in the sun-basking cluster (time 00:01:07:15). On the top, a cold ant moves towards the hot spot (time 00:00:42:00), walks around and remains at the cluster, reaching a higher body temperature (00:01:01:00). Please note that ants leaving the hot spot slowly cool down over time, since the false colour is changing from bright orange to red and pink, which represents a temperature change from 23.5 to 21°C. The ants’ gaster cools down slower than other body parts. The thermographic video was taken during preliminary trials performed at ca. 15 ± 1°C ambient temperature. For the experiments presented in the manuscript, only long-term digital videos were used because the tags used to individually mark ants cannot be recognized on thermographic videos, and ambient temperatures were set at 10°C. |
Software used | |
Date and time of digitizing | 2017-01-23 |
Language | German |