When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Ant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ant

    Ants are distinct in their morphology from other insects in having geniculate (elbowed) antennae, metapleural glands, and a strong constriction of their second abdominal segment into a node-like petiole. The body is divided into three distinct sections (formally known as tagmata): the head, mesosoma, and metasoma.

  3. Leafcutter ant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leafcutter_ant

    These species of tropical, fungus-growing ants are all endemic to South and Central America, Mexico, and parts of the southern United States. [5] Leafcutter ants can carry twenty times their body weight [6] and cut and process fresh vegetation (leaves, flowers, and grasses) to serve as the nutritional substrate for their fungal cultivates. [7]

  4. Carpenter ant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carpenter_ant

    Carpenter ants are considered both predators and scavengers. These ants are foragers that typically eat parts of other dead insects or substances derived from other insects. Common foods for them include insect parts, "honeydew" produced by aphids, and extrafloral nectar from plants. They are also known for eating other sugary liquids such as ...

  5. Outline of ants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outline_of_ants

    Ants – social insects with geniculate (elbowed) antennae and a distinctive node-like structure that forms a slender waist. Ants are of the family Formicidae and evolved from wasp-like ancestors in the mid-Cretaceous period between 110 and 130 million years ago, diversifying after the rise of flowering plants.

  6. Insect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insect

    The dorsal blood vessel circulates the hemolymph, arthropods' fluid analog of blood, from the rear of the body cavity forward. [64] [65] Hemolymph is composed of plasma in which hemocytes are suspended. Nutrients, hormones, wastes, and other substances are transported throughout the insect body in the hemolymph.

  7. Weaver ant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weaver_ant

    Weaver ants or green ants are eusocial insects of the Hymenoptera family Formicidae belonging to the tribe Oecophyllini. Weaver ants live in trees (they are obligately arboreal ) and are known for their unique nest building behaviour where workers construct nests by weaving together leaves using larval silk . [ 3 ]

  8. Oecophylla smaragdina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oecophylla_smaragdina

    Oecophylla smaragdina (common names include Asian weaver ant, weaver ant, green ant, green tree ant, and orange gaster) is a species of arboreal ant found in tropical Asia and Australia. These ants form colonies with multiple nests in trees, each nest being made of leaves stitched together using the silk produced by the ant larvae : hence the ...

  9. Black garden ant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_garden_ant

    Black garden ant with the mandibles of an unidentified creature.. The black garden ant (Lasius niger), also known as the common black ant, is a formicine ant, the type species of the subgenus Lasius, which is found across Europe and in some parts of North America, South America, Asia and Australasia.