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1- Ants build cities
I know you're thinking, "Come on, ant hills are not cities!" Tingling is just anthill, is not it? Wrong! Ants are structures with incredible designs of complex ventilation systems that remove carbon dioxide and bring the purest oxygen into your interior. They also have hundreds of miles of collectors that drain ants' waste in special chambers as if they were a well-planned trash recycling. Ants can still count on an incredibly complex transportation system, even with highways where traffic speed is greatest such as our highways. It is hard to imagine this marvel of engineering in which most are under the ground.
2- Ants are farmers
Like humans, ants grow crops. An absurd is not it? But it's true! Some ant species collect leaves and lead to specially constructed chambers inside the anthill where fungi are grown for food. But it is not just putting the leaf in the little corner that the fungus grows. The growth of the fungus requires planning and dedication: a suitable chamber must be built, the leaves carefully selected, the residues removed so as not to contaminate the fungi that grow, and worker ants still "sow" the leaves with fungus spores. The spores do not grow naturally, the ants need to collect the spores and bring them to the leaves.
3. Ants are "cattlemen"
Ants are not just farmers. Some species are able to domesticate aphids and act as true shepherdesses by protecting them from predators, but by becoming fed up with the sweet fluid that aphids produce. It's how humans do the cows to use milk for food. To collect the "milk" from the aphids, the ants tighten their abdomens from where part of the juice of the digested plant leaves that goes straight to the mouth of the ant that will then share the nutritive fluid with the rest of the colony.
4- Warrior Ants
Ants are the only animals other than humans that plan and coordinate for war in battalions organized against opponents. As humans, ants wage war to conquer territory and food resources from other ant colonies. Sometimes ants wars lead to the total defeat of an opponent and the survivors are captured and kept as slaves. Now that's impressive! The ants have discovered that defeated enemies can be useful. They can be spared and placed to work for the sake of the colony.
5- Ants teach and communicate
A recent study showed that ants can transmit knowledge from one to another and teach other ants how to find food. The behavior of the "ant-teacher" is incredible. An ant trains young ants to locate and collect food. The young ant that is taken along the trail for the first time accompanied by the ant-teacher, is able to locate and collect the food four times faster.
I know you're thinking, "Come on, ant hills are not cities!" Tingling is just anthill, is not it? Wrong! Ants are structures with incredible designs of complex ventilation systems that remove carbon dioxide and bring the purest oxygen into your interior. They also have hundreds of miles of collectors that drain ants' waste in special chambers as if they were a well-planned trash recycling. Ants can still count on an incredibly complex transportation system, even with highways where traffic speed is greatest such as our highways. It is hard to imagine this marvel of engineering in which most are under the ground.
2- Ants are farmers
Like humans, ants grow crops. An absurd is not it? But it's true! Some ant species collect leaves and lead to specially constructed chambers inside the anthill where fungi are grown for food. But it is not just putting the leaf in the little corner that the fungus grows. The growth of the fungus requires planning and dedication: a suitable chamber must be built, the leaves carefully selected, the residues removed so as not to contaminate the fungi that grow, and worker ants still "sow" the leaves with fungus spores. The spores do not grow naturally, the ants need to collect the spores and bring them to the leaves.
3. Ants are "cattlemen"
Ants are not just farmers. Some species are able to domesticate aphids and act as true shepherdesses by protecting them from predators, but by becoming fed up with the sweet fluid that aphids produce. It's how humans do the cows to use milk for food. To collect the "milk" from the aphids, the ants tighten their abdomens from where part of the juice of the digested plant leaves that goes straight to the mouth of the ant that will then share the nutritive fluid with the rest of the colony.
4- Warrior Ants
Ants are the only animals other than humans that plan and coordinate for war in battalions organized against opponents. As humans, ants wage war to conquer territory and food resources from other ant colonies. Sometimes ants wars lead to the total defeat of an opponent and the survivors are captured and kept as slaves. Now that's impressive! The ants have discovered that defeated enemies can be useful. They can be spared and placed to work for the sake of the colony.
5- Ants teach and communicate
A recent study showed that ants can transmit knowledge from one to another and teach other ants how to find food. The behavior of the "ant-teacher" is incredible. An ant trains young ants to locate and collect food. The young ant that is taken along the trail for the first time accompanied by the ant-teacher, is able to locate and collect the food four times faster.
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