Subterranean termites excavate complex underground tunnels for foraging. Most tunnels comprise primary and secondary tunnels. Tunnels originating from the nest are called primary and those branching from the primary tunnels are named secondary tunnels; tertiary and quaternary tunnels are rarely observed. During foraging, termites may thus encounter a considerable number of tunnel-branching nodes. Directional selection at such a node is likely correlated to tunnel-growth activity because tunnels containing more termites have a higher probability of growth. In this study, we investigated how termites select the direction of ment at an artificially-designed branching node, by making chemical trails on filter paper, drawing lines using a ballpoint pen which contained the chemical substance that induces the termite to follow trails. The trails consisted of two lines: straight and branching. The branching line was drawn from the center of the straight line at an angle θ (10°, 20°,…, 90°). We then calculated the ratio of the directional selection as r = Ns/Nb, where Ns and Nb represent the number of straight and branching tunnels selected, respectively. The values of r were statistically classified into three groups based on the angle of the branching trail, as follows: 10° ≤ θ ≤ 20°, 30° ≤ θ ≤ 60°, and 70° ≤ θ ≤ 90°. Our paper briefly discusses the underlying mechanisms of the experimental results.
Subterranean termites excavate complex underground tunnels for foraging. Most tunnels comprise primary and secondary tunnels. Tunnels originating from the nest are called primary and those branching from the primary tunnels are named secondary tunnels; tertiary and quaternary tunnels are rarely observed. During foraging, termites may thus encounter a considerable number of tunnel-branching nodes. Directional selection at such a node is likely correlated to tunnel-growth activity because tunnels containing more termites have a higher probability of growth. In this study, we investigated how termites select the direction of ment at an artificially-designed branching node, by making chemical trails on filter paper, drawing lines using a ballpoint pen which contained the chemical substance that induces the termite to follow trails. The trails consisted of two lines: straight and branching. The branching line was drawn from the center of the straight line at an angle θ (10°, 20°,…, 90°). We then calculated the ratio of the directional selection as r = Ns/Nb, where Ns and Nb represent the number of straight and branching tunnels selected, respectively. The values of r were statistically classified into three groups based on the angle of the branching trail, as follows: 10° ≤ θ ≤ 20°, 30° ≤ θ ≤ 60°, and 70° ≤ θ ≤ 90°. Our paper briefly discusses the underlying mechanisms of the experimental results.