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Time-lapse Imaging of Bacterial Swarms and the Collective Stress Response
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Swarm formation as backward diffusion.

Andy M Reynolds1, Nicholas T Ouellette2

  • 1Rothamsted Research, Harpenden AL5 2JQ, United Kingdom.

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|February 6, 2023
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

A new model explains insect swarm formation, showing how collective behavior and local interactions create cohesive structures. Swarms condense and deepen their structure over time, a phenomenon explained by diffusion and fission-fusion dynamics.

Keywords:
collective behaviourinsect swarmswarm formation

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Area of Science:

  • Collective animal behavior
  • Insect swarm dynamics
  • Mathematical modeling of biological systems

Background:

  • Insect swarms are collective behaviors lacking global order, unlike bird flocks or fish schools.
  • Understanding the mechanisms of insect swarm formation remains a significant knowledge gap in collective behavior research.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To propose a novel mechanism for insect swarm formation consistent with empirical observations.
  • To develop a simple, analytically tractable model predicting new features of swarm formation.
  • To elucidate the origins of harmonic potential wells and swarm cohesion.

Main Methods:

  • Development of a simple, analytically tractable mathematical model.
  • Analysis of diffusion and local fission-fusion dynamics within simulated swarms.
  • Comparison of model predictions with recent empirical observations (Patel and Ouellette 2022).

Main Results:

  • The model demonstrates how harmonic potential wells, crucial for swarm cohesion, emerge from diffusion and fission-fusion dynamics.
  • It predicts that these potential wells deepen over time, consistent with observed swarm formation.
  • Swarm potential well structure is shown to be dependent on the number and spatial distribution of individuals, highlighting its collective nature.

Conclusions:

  • The proposed mechanism provides a parsimonious explanation for insect swarm formation and cohesion.
  • The model correctly predicts observed phenomena and offers new, testable predictions about swarm dynamics.
  • Insect swarms are predicted to 'cool' or condense as they form, driven by the emergent collective dynamics.