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Spotting

Description:

Ant colonies work somewhat like a superorganism, with the queen ant producing little workers that will meet her needs and their siblings' needs. But there is always give and take, with individual survival sometimes trumping the good of the group, the research found. Often, an ant colony has more than one queen. The upside: Multiple queens, each raising broods of worker ants, can produce a larger initial workforce in new colonies, increasing the chance the colony will survive the first year. But queen ants don't merrily cohabit forever. Soon after the young workers hatch, the little ones begin to slaughter surplus queens until only one remains. The tactic: chemical bug warfare. The outcome: death to all but one queen, and sometimes all the queens. "Workers are much smaller and do minimal damage alone, so it can take several days of sustaining biting/acid spraying before they bring her down – perhaps she just dies of thirst," Luke Holman, of the University of Copenhagen's Center for Social Evolution, told LiveScience. "Usually they stop when one is left, but occasionally they are so revved up that they kill all the queens." That's basically evolutionary suicide, he added, since workers are typically sterile and rely on the queen to pass on their genes. The researchers found queen ants have figured out a clever way of staying on top: They produce fewer workers when other queens are around, because productivity comes at a cost. Producing a larger brood zaps energy from the queen, leaving her with less fighting power to defend against murderous worker ants. Here's how the ant battle played out in the lab: Queen ants that had recently mated were housed in plaster nests in a lab, either alone or in groups of two or three queens. Once the eggs were laid and had entered the cocoon stage (just before reaching adulthood), the researchers either snatched some cocoons away or added more to nests. Queens produce fewer workers when sharing the colony with other queens, especially if the colony already has many developing workers. In the study, compared with the equivalent colonies that had no cocoon transferring, those that had their broods increased were 25 percent less productive, while colonies in which cocoons were taken away were 18 percent more productive. The worker ants weren't fooled, however, as they could sniff out a selfish queen, the researchers found. The queens that were most fertile had the stronger chemical cues (and thus stronger odors), which made them more likely to be spared execution by workers. "Execution of the most selfish ant queens by workers would increase the incentive for queens to be team-players that work hard to help the colony," Holman said. "This rudimentary 'legal system' could have helped ants to evolve their highly advanced societies, just as in humans." The study was published Feb. 24 in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

Habitat:

Meadow.

Notes:

Tiny purple/black colored workers (about 2 mm long) & several large Queen ants (see photos # 2 & 3). The first photo shows the "nursery" in the ground, the other 3 are of the ants on the underside of the rock.

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3 Comments

KarenL
KarenL 12 years ago

Ants use their keen senses to communicate with colony members. They produce chemicals called pheromones which are sensed by other ants using their antennae. They can also use their antennae or other body parts to send messages through touch. Touch messages are transmitted through stridulations, which are sounds and vibrations generated by one ant rubbing its body parts together. These forms of communication relay different messages, such as where food is located or what dangers are present. Added to the NWF mission for its super senses.

KarenL
KarenL 12 years ago

Thanks Mary! A lot of ants but the whole colony was only maybe 1 1/2" in diameter!

MaryEvans2
MaryEvans2 12 years ago

WOW that is a lot of ants. Once again wonderful information and spotting

KarenL
Spotted by
KarenL

Franklin, Tennessee, USA

Spotted on Feb 27, 2012
Submitted on Feb 27, 2012

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