<< Previous Next >>

the home of ants'


the home of ants'
Photo Information
Copyright: ozlem ogluekiz (miss_bat) Silver Note Writer [C: 0 W: 0 N: 14] (40)
Genre: Animals
Medium: Color
Date Taken: 2006-05-14
Categories: Insects
Exposure: f/3.4, 1/90 seconds
More Photo Info: [view]
Photo Version: Original Version
Date Submitted: 2008-06-26 6:01
Viewed: 315
Points: 4
[Note Guidelines] Photographer's Note
Ants are of extreme importance in the insect world. They have complex and often obligatory relationships with various plants, which depend on the ants for their wellbeing. These include seed dispersal, pollination, defense by ants against attacks by herbivores, and enrichment of soil through soil turning. Ants also contribute substantially to the enormous biodiversity of insects, and their richly complex lives and relationships have provided scientists with numerous insights concerning evolutionary and ecological phenomena.


Ants are placed in a single family, the Formicidae. They belong to the order Hymenoptera, which includes bees, wasps, sawflies, and ichneumons.

A characteristic of most formicids is the possession of a metapleural gland. This gland produces phenylacetic acid, which fights against fungi and bacteria. It is made up of a pair of cell clusters which lead to two chambers in the rear of the ant's middle body. While the gland is the most diagnostic trait separating ants from other Hymenoptera, it is not universal among ants. Many arboreal species lack the metapleural gland (due perhaps to the drier, cleaner environment). Another trait that characterizes ants is their body structure. The ant head is connected by a thin neck to the thorax, which is then connected by a thin "waist" to the abdomen. While this is the general structure of many insects, ants are distinguished by the waist, which is pinched down posteriorly at its connection with the abdomen.
Ants have a highly structured social system, a feature which has developed in only a few insects, including termites, bees, and wasps. Two or more generations coexist, with the adult ants caring for the young. Ants are divided into castes, with reproductive queens and kings, and sterile workers (all of which are female). Ant colonies vary greatly in their social structure, but three basic stages in the development and life of a colony exist. The first of these is the founding stage, in which a young virgin queen (female alate) leaves the nest of her mother. She flies until she has met and been inseminated by a few males. The males soon die without returning to their nests. Then the female finds a suitable place in the soil or in a rotting tree to build her nest. She forages and cares for her first brood until they are adults. Next the colony enters the second stage, known as the ergonomic stage. Now the queen devotes herself to egg-laying while the workers forage, care for the young, and enlarge the nest. This stage, which centers on colony growth lasts for a period ranging from four months to five years, depending on the species of ant. When the colony is a suitable size, it finally enters into the last stage, the reproductive stage. Now new queens and males are produced, which later leave the nest to produce new colonies, beginning the cycle again.

ammodytes, montivipera has marked this note useful
Only registered TrekNature members may rate photo notes.
Add Critique [Critiquing Guidelines] 
Only registered TrekNature members may write critiques.
Discussions
None
You must be logged in to start a discussion.

Critiques [Translate]

canım merhaba, iyice bağımlısı olduk sıtenın :D. doğal hayatı kesfetmek adına ıncelediğim ılk hayvan grubudur karıncalar, formık asıtın ne işe yaradığını o ıncelemelerım sırasında çözmüştüm, o zamanlar buyuk bı iş sayardım bunu ama sonra düşünunce baska ne işe yarayabılır kı :S neyse, eline sağlıkü, guzel olmuş
İyi geceler arkadasım
Filiz

Selam Özlem,
Güzel bir kare olmuş, eline sağlık. Notlar da gayet bilgilendirici.

Naşit

Calibration Check
















0123456789ABCDEF