Why do animals form swarms Maria R. DOrsogna

When desert locusts are well fed,
they’re solitary creatures.

But when food becomes scarce,

hungry, desperate locusts
crowd onto small patches of land

where they can still find
something to eat.

Contact between different locusts'
hind legs set off a slew of reactions

that change their appearance and behavior.

Now, instead of shunning their peers,
they seek each other out.

The locusts eventually start marching
and then fly away in large numbers

seeking a better habitat.

These gigantic swarms can host
millions of insects

and travel thousands of miles,

devastating vegetation and crops.

They stay close to each other,
but not too close,

or they might get eaten
by their hungry neighbors.

When many individual organisms,
like locusts,

bacteria,

anchovies,

or bats,

come together and move
as one coordinated entity,

that’s a swarm.

From a handful of birds
to billions of insects,

swarms can be almost any size.

But what they have in common
is that there’s no leader.

Members of the swarm interact
only with their nearest neighbors

or through indirect cues.

Each individual follows simple rules:

Travel in the same direction
as those around you,

stay close,

and avoid collisions.

There are many benefits to traveling
in a group like this.

Small prey may fool predators
by assembling into a swarm

that looks like a much bigger organism.

And congregating in a large group

reduces the chance that any single
individual will be captured.

Moving in the same direction
as your neighbors

saves energy by sharing the effort
of fighting wind or water resistance.

It may even be easier to find a mate
in a swarm.

Swarming can also allow groups of animals

to accomplish tasks they couldn’t do
individually.

When hundreds or millions or organisms
follow the same simple rules,

sophisticated behavior called
swarm intelligence may arise.

A single ant can’t do much on its own,

but an ant colony
can solve complex problems,

like building a nest

and finding the shortest path
to a food source.

But sometimes, things can go wrong.

In a crowd, diseases spread more easily,

and some swarming organisms may start
eating each other if food is scarce.

Even some of the benefits of swarms,
like more efficient navigation,

can have catastrophic consequences.

Army ants are one example.

They lay down chemicals called pheromones

which signal their neighbors
to follow the trail.

This is good if the head of the group
is marching towards a food source.

But occasionally the ants in the front
can veer off course.

The whole swarm can get caught
in a loop following the pheromone trail

until they die of exhaustion.

Humans are notoriously individualistic,
though social, animals.

But is there anything we can learn
from collective swarm-based organization?

When it comes to technology,
the answer is definitely yes.

Bats can teach drones how to navigate
confined spaces without colliding,

fish can help design software
for safer driving,

and insects are inspiring robot teams that
can assist search and rescue missions.

For swarms of humans,
it’s perhaps more complicated

and depends on the motives and leadership.

Swarm behavior in human populations can
sometimes manifest as a destructive mob.

But collective action can also produce
a crowd-sourced scientific breakthrough

an artistic expression,

or a peaceful global revolution.

当沙漠蝗虫吃饱时,
它们是孤独的生物。

但是当食物变得稀缺时,

饥饿、绝望的蝗虫会
聚集在小块土地上

,在那里它们仍然可以
找到吃的东西。

不同蝗虫后腿之间的接触会
引发一系列反应

,从而改变它们的外观和行为。

现在,他们不再回避同龄人,
而是互相寻找。

蝗虫最终开始行进
,然后大量飞走,

寻找更好的栖息地。

这些巨大的蜂群可以容纳
数百万只昆虫

并行进数千英里,

破坏植被和农作物。

它们彼此靠近,
但不要靠得太近,

否则它们可能会
被饥饿的邻居吃掉。

当许多个体有机体,
如蝗虫、

细菌、

凤尾鱼

或蝙蝠

聚集在一起并
作为一个协调的实体移动时,

这就是一群。

从几只鸟
到数十亿只昆虫,

蜂群几乎可以是任何大小。

但他们的共同点
是没有领导者。

蜂群的成员
只与最近的邻居

或通过间接线索互动。

每个人都遵循简单的规则:与周围

的人同向行驶

保持靠近

,避免碰撞。

在这样的团体中旅行有很多好处。

小型猎物可能会
通过聚集成

一个看起来像一个更大的有机体的群体来欺骗捕食者。

聚集在一个大群体中

可以减少任何一个
人被抓获的机会。

向与邻居相同的方向移动,

通过分担
抗风或抗水的努力来节省能源。

在蜂群中找到配偶甚至可能更容易

蜂群还可以让动物

群体完成他们无法单独完成的任务

当数以百万计或生物体
遵循相同的简单规则时,

可能会出现称为群体智能的复杂行为。

一只蚂蚁自己不能做很多事情,

但蚁群
可以解决复杂的问题,

比如筑巢

和找到通往食物来源的最短路径

但有时,事情可能会出错。

在人群中,疾病更容易传播,如果食物稀缺

,一些蜂拥而至的生物可能会开始
互相吃食。

即使是群体的一些好处,
比如更有效的导航,

也会产生灾难性的后果。

军蚁就是一个例子。

他们放下称为信息素的化学物质

,向邻居发出信号
,跟随他们的踪迹。

如果该小组的负责人
正在向食物来源行进,这很好。

但偶尔前面的蚂蚁
会偏离轨道。

整个蜂群可能会
沿着信息素的踪迹陷入一个循环,

直到它们筋疲力尽而死。

人类是出了名的个人主义
动物,尽管是社会动物。

但是我们可以
从基于群体的集体组织中学到什么吗?

谈到技术
,答案肯定是肯定的。

蝙蝠可以教无人机如何在
狭窄空间中航行而不发生碰撞,

鱼可以帮助设计软件
以实现更安全的驾驶,

而昆虫则可以激发机器人团队的灵感,
帮助执行搜索和救援任务。

对于一大群人来说,
这可能更复杂,

并且取决于动机和领导力。

人群中的群体行为
有时会表现为破坏性的暴民。

但集体行动也可以
产生众包科学

突破、艺术表现

或和平的全球革命。