What I imagine Hippodamia’s suitors look like with no explanation/ Part 1
Marmax
Alcathous
Euryalus,Eurymachus, Crotalus
Lycurgus
Lasius
Tricolonus
Pelagon
Aeolius
Cronius
Erythras

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from Netherlands

seen from Netherlands

seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States

seen from Pakistan
seen from Pakistan
seen from United States

seen from Austria
seen from Japan
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from India
What I imagine Hippodamia’s suitors look like with no explanation/ Part 1
Marmax
Alcathous
Euryalus,Eurymachus, Crotalus
Lycurgus
Lasius
Tricolonus
Pelagon
Aeolius
Cronius
Erythras
Very fresh lil Lasius :3
Her first workers, couldn't even see her, my only clue that she was there was the opened cocoon.
Such a destructive girls... I love them so much
Please Reblog to Make More Aware of This Dangerous Scam!
Crime is out of control! "The beetles occupy shelters on foraging trails of L. fuliginosis ants. When night comes, they patrol the trails & take food from ants returning to the nest. They target ants with a lot of food in their bodies. They trick ants into feeding them. The ants soon realize they have been tricked and fight the beetle. The beetle responds by flattening its body to the ground in a way that ants cannot roll over."
(Proof that ants have a sense of fairness. LOL. But seriously, please let the ants around you know about this character.)
God bugs are literal real life fairies
and people think they ruin the outdoors????
Picture of my girls after I just gave them a drop of delicious applesauce
@jilldsumner submitted: A citronella ant? They smelled nice when i hit their cave system. I could only find one when i came back with my camera. Va.
Lucky you found the one! I imagine they went back to hiding in the ground. Wish I could be an ant for a day and see what goes on in a colony firsthand
A hoverfly is going to lay eggs at an aphid colony, on which its larvae will feed. Ants protect the aphids from predators and they show aggressive behavior toward hoverflies.