When.com Web Search

Search results

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

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ant

    Meat eater ant nest during swarming. The life of an ant starts from an egg; if the egg is fertilised, the progeny will be female diploid, if not, it will be male haploid. Ants develop by complete metamorphosis with the larva stages passing through a pupal stage before emerging as an adult. The larva is largely immobile and is fed and cared for ...

  3. Leafcutter ant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leafcutter_ant

    Leafcutter ants have very specific roles in taking care of the fungal garden and dumping the refuse. Waste management is a key role for each colony's longevity. The necrotrophic parasitic fungus Escovopsis threatens the ants' food source and thus is a constant danger to the ants. The waste transporters and waste-heap workers are the older, more ...

  4. Longhorn crazy ant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longhorn_crazy_ant

    The longhorn crazy ant is able to invade new habitats and outcompete other species of ants. In 1991, in the large closed dome of the research station Biosphere 2 in the Arizona Desert, no particular ant species was dominant. By 1996, the longhorn crazy ant had virtually replaced all the other ant species. It fed almost exclusively on the ...

  5. Black garden ant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_garden_ant

    Black garden ant with the mandibles of an unindentified 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.

  6. Antlion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antlion

    The larvae therefore have low metabolic rates and can survive for long periods without food. [13] They can take several years to complete their life-cycle; they mature faster with plentiful food, but can survive for many months without feeding. [14] [15] In cooler climates they dig their way deeper and remain inactive during the winter. [10]

  7. Tapinoma sessile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tapinoma_sessile

    The odorous house ant is tough: Injured workers have been observed to continue living and working with little hindrance, some queens with crushed abdomens still lay eggs, and there are documented instances of T. sessile queens surviving without food or water for over two months. They also appear highly tolerant to heat and cold.

  8. Pharaoh ant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pharaoh_ant

    Food deprivation induces a higher amount of foraging ant traffic, compared to a non-deprived population. If a food source is presented to the food deprived colony, this traffic was further increased, an indication of the pharaoh ant's recruitment tactic. If food is not present, a colony will extend its trails to a wider radius around the nest.

  9. Army ant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Army_ant

    Most ant species will send individual scouts to find food sources and later recruit others from the colony to help; however, army ants dispatch a cooperative, leaderless group of foragers to detect and overwhelm the prey at once. [3] [5] Army ants do not have a permanent nest but instead form many bivouacs as they travel.