Ants can accomplish a task more rationally than our – multimodal, egg-headed, tool-using, bipedal, opposing-thumbed – selves. This is not the case of humans being "stupider" than ants. Humans and animals simply often make irrational choices when faced with very challenging decisions. picked by kakana 4 months ago 4 comments edit related share science |
Ingredients – 2 comments edit related share plime.com100 Live Black Ants (avoid red ants, their too spicy) 1 vanilla bean split and seeds scraped out 2 Egg Yolks 1 Tbsp. Sugar 1 tsp. Butter, melted 12 oz. Bittersweet Chocolate picked by sholom22 2 years ago |
Ants from an attacking colony will come up to inspect them, and they’ll be curled up just like a dead ant. Then moments later they uncurl and walk away. picked by doggylives 2 years ago 1 comments edit related share science |
Modeled after the workings of a real ant colony, scientists have created 'digital ants' that can protect your computer from viruses and worms. picked by Ankabout 2 weeks ago 3 comments edit related share plime.com |
Ants! I understand they are also good chocolate coated. picked by Bornbad 12 months ago 0 comments edit related share science |
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The butterflies deposit their larvae on marsh gentian plants where exploring ants find them, identify the chemical coating, and take the butterfly larvae back to the ant colony and feed them until they grow up and leave... picked by dollyllama 2 years ago 2 comments edit related share plime.com |
Trap-jaw ants bite with a force of over 300 times their own bodyweight. Uninvited visitors to a nest of trap-jaw ants can expect a vicious response. picked by Jaxomlotus 3 years ago 0 comments edit related share weird |
Next time you see an army of ants scurrying around, bear in mind that they may be following orders. 4 comments edit related share scienceFor scientists have shown that the insects talk to each other and are more intelligent than anyone ever realised. They discovered that ants communicate by stroking a natural 'washboard' on their abdomen with a body part that resembles a plectrum. picked by AutumnLotus 8 months ago |
The name alone is enough to induce a shudder: the Asian needle ant. picked by Bornbad 11 months ago 4 comments edit related share world |
Tiny radio transmitters were fitted to ants by scientists to study their house-hunting habits. picked by AutumnLotus 7 months ago 1 comments edit related share plime.com |
A bunch of ants devour a dead gecko from flesh to bone in a matter of a hours. Pretty cool time lapse. picked by lostsoul135 1 year ago 9 comments edit related share science |
I couldn't tell where this video was actually taking place but it is a pretty bizarre annual festival. Some guys dressed like clowns run through the streets whipping people with sticks with festivities culminating in a shower of fire ants! Sounds like fun huh? picked by BrownTrout 3 years ago 0 comments edit related share plime.com |
Scientists have been studying how ants behave in colonies and have found that they willingly plug "potholes" with their bodies, testing the holes first to see what size ant is needed, then allowing the colony to march right over them for the greater good! picked by BrownTrout 2 years ago 18 comments edit related share plime.com |
Life really stinks for Argentine ants. New research shows that while alive, the ants produce two odoriferous chemicals that prevent their compatriots from immediately carting their bodies away to the 'morgue'. 4 comments edit related share science*word of the day...Pupae* picked by Bornbad 6 months ago |
Army ants tired of potholes take one for the team, throwing their bodies into rough spots to make a smoother road for their sisters. picked by AutumnLotus 2 years ago 2 comments edit related share plime.com |
Unusual behavior of a group of kleptoparasitic flies in South Africa. They lay in wait for ants, and mug them, literally stealing food from their mouths! picked by bingo 6 months ago 0 comments edit related share plime.com |
A flood hits a fire ant colony in the Amazon jungle. An amazing chance to see footage on how the species has adapted to water to protect their queen. 3 comments edit related share plime.comEmbedding doesn't work. Click here picked by AutumnLotus 12 months ago |
South Texans eager to salvage what they can from waterlogged homes struck by Hurricane Dolly have another problem. "You don't want to wade in this water," state Health Services Commissioner David Lakey said. "You don't want to play in this water. You want to stay out of this water." picked by deEPCHIll 1 year ago 0 comments edit related share world |
An Amazonian ant has dispensed with sex and developed into an all-female species, researchers have found. picked by Ankabout 7 months ago 0 comments edit related share plime.com |
These destructive little varmints cause 6 billion dollars worth of damage a year in the USA alone, not to mention their bites burn like the poisonous flames of hell. Now scientists fight back with an ant-specific virus. picked by VooDooPeacock 3 years ago 7 comments edit related share plime.com |