2022
DOI: 10.1177/26339137221123758
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Social insects and beyond: The physics of soft, dense invertebrate aggregations

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 insec… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 131 publications
(269 reference statements)
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“…(1) borrow concepts from established programs that mass-rear sterile fruit flies, screwworms, and mosquitoes; (2) conduct studies that can link knowledge across disciplines (e.g., [121][122][123] ); and especially, (3) pursue fieldwork that assesses the wild flies, their ecology, genetic diversity, and associated microbiota.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…(1) borrow concepts from established programs that mass-rear sterile fruit flies, screwworms, and mosquitoes; (2) conduct studies that can link knowledge across disciplines (e.g., [121][122][123] ); and especially, (3) pursue fieldwork that assesses the wild flies, their ecology, genetic diversity, and associated microbiota.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As was the case for larvae a decade ago, information surrounding adult H. illucens is fragmentary and presently must be scaffolded by that gleaned from other study systems. To address this, future work might: (1) borrow concepts from established programs that mass‐rear sterile fruit flies, screwworms, and mosquitoes; (2) conduct studies that can link knowledge across disciplines (e.g., [ 121–123 ] ); and especially, (3) pursue fieldwork that assesses the wild flies, their ecology, genetic diversity, and associated microbiota.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When together at high densities in three-dimensions, the ant collective can be thought of as an active material with well-defined viscoelastic properties. This makes the ants somewhat analogous to other entangled active materials [66], such as clumps of cells [67] and blobs of worms [68], with possible connections to theoretical treatments of active viscoelastic matter [69,70]. Within a certain frequency range, the rheological response of an ant-collective is predominantly elastic, with a mechanical response that is solid-like [58].…”
Section: Activity Cyclesmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Animal collectives perform some of the most striking examples of behaviour observed [1]. Surprisingly, self-organised aggregations can be the emergent product of individuals following simple behavioural rules [2], as opposed to those that require complicated cognition or decision-making to form.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%