ALTAA: Analysis of long-term activity patterns in ant colonies

Oh J, Cremer S. 2026. ALTAA: Analysis of long-term activity patterns in ant colonies. Methods in Ecology and Evolution.

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Abstract
1. Collective behaviours are a fascinating study area due to the emergent properties that can only arise in groups of interacting individuals. However, their quantitative study is often impaired by technical difficulties, creating either low-quality and sparse data or impractical data amounts, particularly when capturing large groups over long periods of time. Common challenges arise from recording group members with as little obscuring of each other as possible, as well as in generating manageable data amounts with as high as possible information content. 2. We here provide a multicomponent system that allows to record, analyse and simulate the long-term spatiotemporal activity patterns of insect collectives, especially ant colonies. Our Ant Observing System, ALTAA, comprises a flat-nest design to prevent occlusion of individuals, a recording system running on a low-power single-board-computer, and a set of computer programmes performing quantitative analyses to guide the formation and validation of rules underlying the observed collective patterns. Our system is scalable in that it allows parallel, continuous observation of a high number of colonies using low memory space, with colony maintenance requirements (e.g. feeding, nest humidity) being achieved at lowest possible disturbance by the experimenter. 3. We showcase the potential of the system in a study using the black garden ant, Lasius niger, where we analyse the spatiotemporal effects of different group sizes (1, 6, 10 ants), brood (larvae) presence or absence, as well as of different nest geometries, over a period of 1 week. We show that the ants' motion activity has a weak periodicity in the range of 20 to 120 min promoted by larval presence, and that ants are spatially attracted to their larvae, the water source and the walls. We also find that the presence of nestmates lowers an individual ant's motion activity. Observed data are compared to simulations of the temporal activity of the ants. 4. ALTAA provides a powerful toolkit to quantify and interpret spatial and temporal collective activity patterns in (social) insects over extended periods.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2026-03-06
Journal Title
Methods in Ecology and Evolution
Publisher
Wiley
Acknowledgement
We thank Harikrishnan Rajendran for discussion. This project has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme (grant agreement No. 771402; EPIDEMICSonCHIP to S.C.). Open Access funding provided by Institute of Science and Technology Austria/KEMÖ.
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Oh J, Cremer S. ALTAA: Analysis of long-term activity patterns in ant colonies. Methods in Ecology and Evolution. 2026. doi:10.1111/2041-210x.70277
Oh, J., & Cremer, S. (2026). ALTAA: Analysis of long-term activity patterns in ant colonies. Methods in Ecology and Evolution. Wiley. https://doi.org/10.1111/2041-210x.70277
Oh, Jinook, and Sylvia Cremer. “ALTAA: Analysis of Long-Term Activity Patterns in Ant Colonies.” Methods in Ecology and Evolution. Wiley, 2026. https://doi.org/10.1111/2041-210x.70277.
J. Oh and S. Cremer, “ALTAA: Analysis of long-term activity patterns in ant colonies,” Methods in Ecology and Evolution. Wiley, 2026.
Oh J, Cremer S. 2026. ALTAA: Analysis of long-term activity patterns in ant colonies. Methods in Ecology and Evolution.
Oh, Jinook, and Sylvia Cremer. “ALTAA: Analysis of Long-Term Activity Patterns in Ant Colonies.” Methods in Ecology and Evolution, Wiley, 2026, doi:10.1111/2041-210x.70277.
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