Ants are common insects, but they have some
unique capabilities. More than 10,000 known ant species occur around
the world. They are especially prevalent in tropical forests, where
they may be up to half of all the insects living in some locations.
Ants
look much like termites, and the two are often confused—especially by
nervous homeowners. However, ants have a narrow "waist" between the
abdomen and thorax, which termites do not. Ants also have large heads,
elbowed antennae, and powerful jaws. These insects belong to the order
Hymenoptera, which includes wasps and bees.
Enthusiastically
social insects, ants typically live in structured nest communities
that may be located underground, in ground-level mounds, or in trees.
Carpenter ants nest in wood and can be destructive to buildings. Some
species, such as army ants, defy the norm and do not have permanent
homes, instead seeking out food for their enormous colonies during
periods of migration.
Ant communities are
headed by a queen or queens, whose function in life is to lay thousands
of eggs that will ensure the survival of the colony. Workers (the ants
typically seen by humans) are wingless females that never reproduce,
but instead forage for food, care for the queen's offspring, work on
the nest, protect the community, and perform many other duties.
Male ants often have only one role—mating with the queen. After they have performed this function, they may die.
Ants
communicate and cooperate by using chemicals that can alert others to
danger or lead them to a promising food source. They typically eat
nectar, seeds, fungus, or insects. However, some species have diets that
are more unusual. Army ants may prey on reptiles, birds, or even small
mammals.
One Amazon species (Allomerus decemarticulatus)
cooperatively builds extensive traps from plant fiber. These traps
have many holes and, when an insect steps on one, hundreds of ants
inside use the openings to seize it with their jaws.
Another species, the yellow crazy ant (Anoplolepis gracilipes),
is capable of forming so-called supercolonies that house multiple
queens. On Australia’s Christmas Island, the accidental introduction of
yellow crazy ants in the early 20th century has led to a destructive
infestation. The ants are a significant threat to the island’s endemic
population of red crabs, which are displaced by the ants from their
burrows or killed as they pass through ant nest sites during the crabs'
large-scale annual migration from the forest to the coast.
-National Geographic-
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