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  2. These Homeowners Didn't Know They Had an Ant Problem ... - AOL

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    The species typically doesn't bite humans unless provoked, but they do like to make their nests in damp wood—which explains the draw of an often-empty old cabin in the mountains. Truthfully, it ...

  3. Anting (behavior) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anting_(behavior)

    A black drongo in a typical anting posture. Anting is a maintenance behavior during which birds rub insects, usually ants, on their feathers and skin.The bird may pick up the insects in its bill and rub them on the body (active anting), or the bird may lie in an area of high density of the insects and perform dust bathing-like movements (passive anting).

  4. Honeypot ant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Honeypot_ant

    Honey ants are unique in using their own bodies as living storage, used later by their fellow ants when food is otherwise scarce. When the liquid stored inside a honeypot ant is needed, the worker ants stroke the antennae of the honeypot ant, causing the honeypot ant to regurgitate the stored liquid from its crop. [4] [5]

  5. Weaver ant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weaver_ant

    Weaver ants are one of the most valued types of edible insects consumed by humans (human entomophagy). In addition to being used as a biological control agent to increase plant production, weaver ants can be utilized directly as a protein and food source since the ants (especially the ant larvae) are edible for humans and high in protein and ...

  6. Why Ants—Not Humans—Might Be the First Animal That ... - AOL

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    We’re not quite as intriguing as we think we are.

  7. Why Ants—Not Humans—Might Be the First Animal That ... - AOL

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  8. Ant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ant

    Ants vary in colour; most ants are yellow to red or brown to black, but a few species are green and some tropical species have a metallic lustre. More than 13,800 species are currently known [37] (with upper estimates of the potential existence of about 22,000; see the article List of ant genera), with the greatest diversity in the tropics ...

  9. Ant communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ant_communication

    Ant communication in most species involves pheromones, which is a method using chemical trails for other ants or insects to find and follow. [ 1 ] However, ants of some species can communicate without using pheromones or chemical trails in general.