Sydney NSW, Australia
For your information
2024-03-23T00:05:00.0000000Z
   0
Empire of the ants: what insect supercolonies can teach us

The Guardian

People have long drawn comparisons between ant societies and human ones – but in fact they are a reminder of how limited our influence on the world really is

It is a familiar story: a small group of animals living in a wooded grassland begin, against all odds, to populate Earth. At first, they occupy a specific ecological place in the landscape, kept in check by other species. Then something changes. The animals find a way to travel to new places. They learn to cope with unpredictability. They adapt to new kinds of food and shelter. They are clever. And they are aggressive.

In the new places, the old limits are missing. As their population grows and their reach expands, the animals lay claim to more territories, reshaping the relationships in each new landscape by eliminating some species and nurturing others. Over time, they create the largest animal societies, in terms of numbers of individuals, that the planet has ever known. And at the borders of those societies, they fight the most destructive within-species conflicts, in terms of individual fatalities, that the planet has ever known.

Read on: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/mar/19/empire-of-the-ants-what-insect-supercolonies-can-teach-us

Ants

No responses yet...