From Disorder to Order in Marching Locusts
Princeton University · UNSW Sydney · +1 more institution
Abstract
Recent models from theoretical physics have predicted that mass-migrating animal groups may share group-level properties, irrespective of the type of animals in the group. One key prediction is that as the density of animals in the group increases, a rapid transition occurs from disordered movement of individuals within the group to highly aligned collective motion. Understanding such a transition is crucial to the control of mobile swarming insect pests such as the desert locust. We confirmed the prediction of a rapid transition from disordered to ordered movement and identified a critical density for the onset of coordinated marching in locust nymphs. We also demonstrated a dynamic instability in motion at…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 23.19
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 29
Authors
7- CBCamille Buhl
Princeton University, UNSW Sydney, University of Oxford
- DJDavid J. T. Sumpter
Princeton University, UNSW Sydney, University of Oxford
- IDIain D. Couzin
Princeton University, UNSW Sydney, University of Oxford
- JJJoseph J. Hale
Princeton University, UNSW Sydney, University of Oxford
- EDEmma DesplandCorresponding
Princeton University, UNSW Sydney, University of Oxford
Topics & keywords
- Locust
- Swarming (honey bee)
- Desert locust
- Perturbation (astronomy)
- Nymph
- Instability
- Collective motion
- Physics