Macro practice on the local ant highway :) They travel up and down the trunk of our mandarine tree incessantly, feeding on the flowers and farming aphids.
Unknown ants, two individuals (superfamily Formicoidea) on mandarine tree (Citrus reticulata).
seen from China
seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Netherlands
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Philippines
seen from Russia
seen from Australia
seen from Greece
seen from China

seen from United Arab Emirates

seen from Brazil
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seen from Singapore

seen from United States

seen from China

seen from Ireland
Macro practice on the local ant highway :) They travel up and down the trunk of our mandarine tree incessantly, feeding on the flowers and farming aphids.
Unknown ants, two individuals (superfamily Formicoidea) on mandarine tree (Citrus reticulata).
Ant (Formicidae)
Photo by shikhei goh
Green Ant Nest
I managed to photograph the workers, the queen, and even the eggs and larvae! This nest is in very early stages of development as you can see.
Oecophylla smaragdina
23/02/23
@formicoidea liked THIS for a starter
Dark eyes moved over the male with high suspicion, it was habit, being wary of people in general-- this time around it was because she had just ripped off the casino a few blocks away, hence the uneasy shifting as the sound of sirens reached her. “What’re you lookin’ at?” Ava asked, defensive and annoyed, she had always been shit at keeping her cool in any situation let alone when she felt people were prying or looking at her for too long, which was likely the case in this particular situation. She shifted, sniffling softly and glancing away, observing the street some more.
Newly discovered beetle catches a ride on the backs of army ants to get around
Dr. Christoph von Beeren of Germany’s Technical University Darmstadt was collecting “ant guests” during the nightly emigration of an army ant colony at La Selva Biological Station, a lowland Atlantic rainforest in Costa Rica, when he and his colleagues realized that the abdomens of some of the ants looked odd.
The researchers used their headlamps to get a better look. “From above it is difficult to detect the parasite, because the beetle closely resembles the ant’s abdomen,” von Beeren said in a statement. “When viewed from the side, however, it looks as if the ants had a second abdomen. To our surprise the odd looking ‘ant abdomens’ turned out to be beetles.”
Von Beeren and his colleagues described the newly discovered beetle species that they had spotted catching a ride on the backs of army ants in an article published in the journal BMC Zoology yesterday.
“To the human eye, the beetle is quite difficult to detect when attached to the ant as they are similar in size and shape to the host ants’ abdomen,” von Beeren added. “The outer shell of the beetle is also smooth and shiny, just like the ants. We think that by imitating this part of the ants’ body they might reduce the chance of recognition by the ants, allowing the beetle to travel undetected.”
In the BMC Zoology article, von Beeren and his co-author, Alexey Tishechkin of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Systematic Entomology Laboratory, write that what they’d observed was an “exceptional mechanism of phoresy,” which is when two organisms form a symbiotic relationship in which one (in this case, the beetle) travels on the body of another.
Many other organisms, including additional species of beetles as well as flies, mites, silverfish, and wasps, are also known to exploit army ant colonies. These army ant-dependent species “often show astonishing adaptations such as chemical and morphological mimicry of ant workers, protective morphologies, as well as life history adaptations to the hosts’ life cycles,” the researchers write in the study.
The new beetle, named Nymphister kronaueri after Daniel Kronauer, an army-ant researcher at The Rockefeller University in New York who first discovered the species, uses its strong mandibles to anchor itself to ants’ bodies during the nomadic army ants’ regular emigrations to new nesting sites. N. kronaueri was only found hitching a ride on one particular army ant species, Eciton mexicanum, primarily on medium-sized workers, which von Beeren and Tisheckin say demonstrates that it is a highly specialized ant guest.
Neotropical army ant colonies cycle between stationary and nomadic phases, which last about three and two weeks, respectively, for ants in the Eciton genus, von Beeren and Tishechkin note in the study. A colony will stay at the same site during the stationary phase and emigrate to a new nest site every night during its nomadic phase.
Organisms that depend on ants for their own survival during at least part of their lifecycle are called “myrmecophiles” — which literally translates to “ant lovers.” “Since army ants are nomadic, myrmecophiles exploiting their societies share the need to track their host colonies during the frequent colony emigrations to new bivouac sites,” the researchers write. “They achieve this by riding on or being carried by the ants, or by walking independently on the ants’ emigration trail.”
Teamwork.
Oecophylla smaragdina
25/01/22
Dead Earth Worm being harvested by ants.
Unknown, Oligochaeta (worm) Unknown, Formicidae (ants)
30/05/22
Small Pony Ant found trotting about.
Unknown, Rhytidoponera
01/06/22