Behavioral Mazes

Ant Binary Tree Maze

$690.00

Binary tree maze apparatus (150 × 50 cm) for studying ant spatial navigation, decision-making, and foraging behavior in controlled laboratory environments.

Key Specifications
Automation Levelmanual
SpeciesAnt
SKU:ME-8903
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PhD, Neuroscience
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The Ant Binary Tree Maze is a specialized behavioral apparatus designed for studying spatial navigation, decision-making, and foraging behavior in ant colonies and individual ants. This maze features a binary branching structure where ants encounter sequential choice points, allowing researchers to examine spatial memory formation, route optimization, and collective foraging strategies in controlled laboratory conditions.

The apparatus measures 150 cm in length by 50 cm in width with 15 cm rim height, providing sufficient space for ant movement while containing subjects within the experimental arena. The binary tree configuration enables systematic investigation of navigation algorithms employed by ants, including path integration, landmark use, and trail-following behaviors. Researchers can manipulate environmental cues, food placement, and maze complexity to study how ants adapt their navigation strategies under varying conditions.

How It Works

The binary tree maze operates on the principle of sequential decision-making, where ants encounter a series of T-junction choice points arranged in a branching tree structure. At each node, subjects must select between two pathways, creating a systematic framework for studying spatial decision algorithms. The maze geometry forces ants to commit to directional choices, enabling quantitative analysis of path selection patterns and route optimization strategies.

Researchers can manipulate environmental variables including food placement, chemical trail deposition, and visual landmarks to examine how ants integrate multiple information sources during navigation. The apparatus allows for both individual tracking studies and colony-level experiments, where multiple ants may interact through pheromone deposition and social facilitation. Video tracking systems can record movement patterns, choice latencies, and path efficiency metrics for detailed behavioral analysis.

Features & Benefits

150 × 50 cm dimensions
Provides adequate space for natural ant movement patterns while maintaining experimental control over navigation choices
15 cm rim height
Prevents subject escape while allowing clear observation and video recording of behavioral responses
Binary tree structure
Creates systematic decision points for quantitative analysis of spatial choice behavior and route optimization
Durable construction materials
Enables repeated cleaning with ethanol and other solvents without degradation of maze structure
Modular design compatibility
Allows integration with additional maze components for extended experimental protocols
Standardized dimensions
Facilitates cross-laboratory comparisons and replication of published behavioral protocols

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Total: $1,240.00
Ant Binary Tree Maze
Ant Binary Tree Maze
$690.00
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