Ant
- This article is about the insect. For other Ant or ANT articles, see Ant (disambiguation).
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Genera: Formica, Eciton, Pheidole Atta, Ponera, Cerapachys Myrmecia, Pseudomyrmex, etc. Subfamilies: Formicomorph subfamilies Aneuretinae Dolichoderinae Formicinae Myrmeciomorph subfamilies Myrmeciinae Pseudomyrmecinae Dorylomorph subfamilies Cerapachyinae Ecitoninae Leptanilloidinae Aenictinae Dorylinae Aenictogitoninae Leptanillomorph subfamilies Apomyrminae Leptanillinae Poneromorph subfamilies Amblyoponinae Ponerinae Ectatomminae Heteroponerinae Paraponerinae Proceratiinae Myrmicomorph subfamilies Agroecomyrmecinae Myrmicinae Extinct subfamilies Armaniinae Sphecomyrminae Brownimeciinae Formiciinae Subfamily incertae sedis Paleosminthurinae |
| Table of contents |
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2 Development 3 Communication and behaviour 4 Types 5 Symbiotic relationships with ants 6 Humans and ants 7 See also 8 External links |
Colonies
Ant colonies are eusocial, and are very much like those found in other such Hymenopterans, though the various groups of these probably developed sociality independently through convergent evolution. Eggs are laid by one or sometimes more queens. Queens are different in structure. They are the largest ones among all ants, especially their abdomens and thorax are bigger than most ants. Their tasks are to lay eggs and produce more offspring. Most of the eggs that are laid by the queens grow up to become wingless, sterile females called workers. Periodically swarms of new queens and males called alates are produced, usually winged, which leave to mate. The males die shortly thereafter, while the surviving queens either found new colonies or occasionally return to their old one. The surviving queens can live up to around 15 years.
Development
Ants develop by complete metamorphosis, passing through larval and pupal stages before they become adults. The larval stage is particularly helpless - for instance it lacks legs entirely - because it does not need to care for itself. The difference between queens and workers, and between different castes of workers when they exist, is determined by feeding in the larval stage. Food is given to the larvae by a process called
A new worker spends the first few days of its adult life caring for the queen and young. After that it graduates to digging and other nest work, and then again to foraging and defense of the nest. These changes are fairly abrupt and define what are called temporal castes. In a few ants there are also physical castes - workers come in a spectrum of sizes, called minor, media, and major workers, the latter beginning foraging sooner. Often the larger ants will have disproportionately larger heads, and so stronger mandibles. In a few species the media workers have disappeared, so there is a sharp divide and clear physical difference between the minors and majors, sometimes called soldiers.
Ant communication is primarily through chemicals called pheromones, which, because most ants spend their time in direct contact with the ground, are more developed than in other Hymenopterans. So, for instance, when a forager finds food on her way home (found typically through remembered landmarks and the position of the sun), she will leave a trail along the ground, which in a short time other ants will follow. When they return home they will reinforce the trail, bringing other ants, until the food is exhausted, after which the trail is not reinforced and so slowly dissipates. A crushed ant will emit an alarm pheromone that in high concentration sends other ants nearby into an attack frenzy, and in lower concentration attracts them, while a few ants use what are called propaganda pheromones to confuse their enemies. And so forth.
Like other insects, ants smell with their antennae. These are fairly mobile, having as mentioned above a distinct elbow joint after an elongated first segment, and since they come in pairs provide information about direction as well as intensity. Pheromones are also exchanged as compounds mixed in with the food interchanged in trophallaxis, giving the ants information about one another's health and nutrition. Ants can also detect what task group (e.g. foraging or nest maintenance) each other belongs to. Of special note, the queen produces a special pheromone without which the workers will begin raising new queens.
Ants attack and defend themselves by biting, and in many species, stinging, in both cases sometimes injecting chemicals into the target. Of special note here is formic acid.
Human beings have had a mixed relationship with ants through most of history. They can also be important for clearing out insect pests and aerating the soil. On the other hand, they can become minor annoyances or major pests themselves when they invade homes, yards, gardens and fields. Carpenter ants damage wood by hollowing it out for nesting.
Nests may be destroyed by tracing the ants' trails back to the nest, then pouring boiling water into it to kill the queen. (Killing individual ants is less than effective due to the secrietion of pheremones mentioned above).
Some species, called killer ants, have a tendency to attack much larger animals during foraging or in defending their nests. Human attacks are rare, but the stings and bites can be quite painful and in large enough numbers can be disabling. These can be especially problematic when introduced into areas where they are not native.
Ants have often been used in fables and children's stories to represent industriousness and cooperative effort, as well as aggressiveness and vindictiveness, and ants are sometimes used as a cure for laziness (such as in Morocco). In parts of Africa, ants are the messengers of the gods. Ant bites are often said to have curative properties. Some Native American religions, such as Hopi mythology, recognize ants as the first people. Others use ant bites in initiation ceremonies as a test of endurance.
Termites, sometimes called "white ants," are in fact not closely related to ants, though they have a somewhat similar social structure. They comprise the order Isoptera.
Communication and behaviour
Types
There is a great diversity among ants and their behaviors.
See list of ant genera (alphabetical) for an alphabetical compendium of wordwide ant genera. Symbiotic relationships with ants
Humans and ants
See also
External links



