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Dive into the research topics where Chloé A. Raderschall is active.

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Featured researches published by Chloé A. Raderschall.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Navigational Efficiency of Nocturnal Myrmecia Ants Suffers at Low Light Levels

Ajay Narendra; Samuel F. Reid; Chloé A. Raderschall

Insects face the challenge of navigating to specific goals in both bright sun-lit and dim-lit environments. Both diurnal and nocturnal insects use quite similar navigation strategies. This is despite the signal-to-noise ratio of the navigational cues being poor at low light conditions. To better understand the evolution of nocturnal life, we investigated the navigational efficiency of a nocturnal ant, Myrmecia pyriformis, at different light levels. Workers of M. pyriformis leave the nest individually in a narrow light-window in the evening twilight to forage on nest-specific Eucalyptus trees. The majority of foragers return to the nest in the morning twilight, while few attempt to return to the nest throughout the night. We found that as light levels dropped, ants paused for longer, walked more slowly, the success in finding the nest reduced and their paths became less straight. We found that in both bright and dark conditions ants relied predominantly on visual landmark information for navigation and that landmark guidance became less reliable at low light conditions. It is perhaps due to the poor navigational efficiency at low light levels that the majority of foragers restrict navigational tasks to the twilight periods, where sufficient navigational information is still available.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Compound eye adaptations for diurnal and nocturnal lifestyle in the intertidal ant, Polyrhachis sokolova.

Ajay Narendra; Ali Alkaladi; Chloé A. Raderschall; Simon K.A. Robson; Willi A. Ribi

The Australian intertidal ant, Polyrhachis sokolova lives in mudflat habitats and nests at the base of mangroves. They are solitary foraging ants that rely on visual cues. The ants are active during low tides at both day and night and thus experience a wide range of light intensities. We here ask the extent to which the compound eyes of P. sokolova reflect the fact that they operate during both day and night. The ants have typical apposition compound eyes with 596 ommatidia per eye and an interommatidial angle of 6.0°. We find the ants have developed large lenses (33 µm in diameter) and wide rhabdoms (5 µm in diameter) to make their eyes highly sensitive to low light conditions. To be active at bright light conditions, the ants have developed an extreme pupillary mechanism during which the primary pigment cells constrict the crystalline cone to form a narrow tract of 0.5 µm wide and 16 µm long. This pupillary mechanism protects the photoreceptors from bright light, making the eyes less sensitive during the day. The dorsal rim area of their compound eye has specialised photoreceptors that could aid in detecting the orientation of the pattern of polarised skylight, which would assist the animals to determine compass directions required while navigating between nest and food sources.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2016

Head roll stabilisation in the nocturnal bull ant Myrmecia pyriformis: implications for visual navigation.

Chloé A. Raderschall; Ajay Narendra; Jochen Zeil

ABSTRACT Ant foragers are known to memorise visual scenes that allow them to repeatedly travel along idiosyncratic routes and to return to specific places. Guidance is provided by a comparison between visual memories and current views, which critically depends on how well the attitude of the visual system is controlled. Here we show that nocturnal bull ants stabilise their head to varying degrees against locomotion-induced body roll movements, and this ability decreases as light levels fall. There are always un-compensated head roll oscillations that match the frequency of the stride cycle. Head roll stabilisation involves both visual and non-visual cues as ants compensate for body roll in complete darkness and also respond with head roll movements when confronted with visual pattern oscillations. We show that imperfect head roll control degrades navigation-relevant visual information and discuss ways in which navigating ants may deal with this problem. Summary: Navigating ants keep their head horizontally aligned, but not perfectly so, which has consequences for visual navigation.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2013

Homing abilities of the Australian intertidal ant, Polyrhachis sokolova

Ajay Narendra; Chloé A. Raderschall; Simon K.A. Robson

SUMMARY The pressure of returning to and locating the nest after a successful foraging trip is immense in ants. To find their way back home, ants use a number of different strategies (e.g. path integration, trail following) and rely on a range of cues (e.g. pattern of polarised skylight, landmark panorama) available in their environment. How ants weigh different cues has been a question of great interest and has primarily been addressed in the desert ants from Africa and Australia. We here identify the navigational abilities of an intertidal ant, Polyrhachis sokolova, that lives on mudflats where nests and foraging areas are frequently inundated with tidal water. We find that these solitary foraging ants rely heavily on visual landmark information for navigation, but they are also capable of path integration. By displacing ants with and without vector information at different locations within the local familiar territory, we created conflicts between information from the landmarks and information from the path integrator. The homing success of full-vector ants, compared with the zero-vector ants, when displaced 5 m behind the feeder, indicate that vector information had to be coupled with landmark information for successful homing. To explain the differences in the homing abilities of ants from different locations we determined the navigational information content at each release station and compared it with that available at the feeder location. We report here the interaction of multiple navigation strategies in the context of the information content in the environment.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2013

Flicker is part of a multi-cue response criterion in fiddler crab predator avoidance

Jochen Smolka; Chloé A. Raderschall; Jan M. Hemmi

SUMMARY Predator avoidance behaviour costs time, energy and opportunities, and prey animals need to balance these costs with the risk of predation. The decisions necessary to strike this balance are often based on information that is inherently imperfect and incomplete because of the limited sensory capabilities of prey animals. Our knowledge, however, about how prey animals solve the challenging task of restricting their responses to the most dangerous stimuli in their environment is very limited. Using dummy predators, we examined the contribution of visual flicker to the predator avoidance response of the fiddler crab Uca vomeris. The results illustrate that crabs let purely black or purely white dummies approach significantly closer than black-and-white flickering dummies. We show that this effect complements other factors that modulate escape timing such as retinal speed and the crabs distance to its burrow, and is therefore not due exclusively to an earlier detection of the flickering signal. By combining and adjusting a range of imperfect response criteria in a way that relates to actual threats in their natural environment, prey animals may be able to measure risk and adjust their responses more efficiently, even under difficult or noisy sensory conditions.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2011

Habituation under natural conditions: model predators are distinguished by approach direction.

Chloé A. Raderschall; Robert D. Magrath; Jan M. Hemmi


Myrmecological News | 2014

Individual foraging patterns of the jack jumper ant Myrmecia croslandi (Hymenoptera: Formicidae)

Piyankarie Jayatilaka; Chloé A. Raderschall; Ajay Narendra; Jochen Zeil


Archive | 2014

Balancing act: Head stabilisation in Myrmecia ants during twilight

Chloé A. Raderschall; Ajay Narendra; Jochen Zeil


Scientific Reports | 2016

Corrigendum: Follower ants in a tandem pair are not always naïve

Patrick Schultheiss; Chloé A. Raderschall; Ajay Narendra


Archive | 2014

Ant navigation under constraints of size and photons

Ajay Narendra; Fiorella Ramirez Esquivel; Chloé A. Raderschall; Jochen Zeil

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Jochen Zeil

Australian National University

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Jan M. Hemmi

University of Western Australia

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Piyankarie Jayatilaka

Australian National University

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Robert D. Magrath

Australian National University

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Samuel F. Reid

Australian National University

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Willi A. Ribi

Australian National University

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Ali Alkaladi

King Abdulaziz University

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