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  2. Leafcutter ant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leafcutter_ant

    If a particular type of leaf is toxic to the fungus, the colony will no longer collect it. The only two other groups of insects to use fungus-based agriculture are ambrosia beetles and termites. The fungus cultivated by the adults is used to feed the ant larvae, and the adult ants feed on leaf sap. The fungus needs the ants to stay alive, and ...

  3. List of leafcutter ants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_leafcutter_ants

    Town ant, parasol ant, fungus ant, Texas leafcutter ant, cut ant, night ant Texas, Louisiana, northeastern states of Mexico Atta vollenweideri: Acromyrmex ameliae: southern Brazil Acromyrmex ambiguus: Quenquém-preto-brilhante: Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay: Acromyrmex aspersus: Quenquém-rajada : southern Brazil and Peru: Acromyrmex balzani

  4. Fungus-growing ants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fungus-growing_ants

    The scale of the farming done by fungus-farming ants can be compared to human's industrialized farming. [5] [11] [78] [79] A colony can "[defoliate] a mature eucalyptus tree overnight". [33] The cutting of leaves to grow fungus to feed millions of ants per colony has a large ecological impact in the subtropical areas in which they reside. [7]

  5. Acromyrmex versicolor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acromyrmex_versicolor

    Acromyrmex versicolor is known as the desert leafcutter ant. A. versicolor is found during the summer months in the Colorado and Sonoran deserts when there is precipitation. They form large, distinctive nest craters that are covered with leaf fragments. Living and dead leaves are collected by workers and used to cultivate fungus gardens. [2]

  6. Acromyrmex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acromyrmex

    The ants actively cultivate their fungus on a medium of masticated leaf tissue. This is the sole food of the queen and other colony members that remain in the nest. The mediae also gain subsistence from plant sap they ingest whilst physically cutting out sections of leaf from a variety of plants.

  7. Ant–fungus mutualism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antfungus_mutualism

    The fungus Escovopsis is a parasite in fungus-growing ant colonies that can greatly harm the fungal gardens through infection, [22] and the bacterium Pseudonocardia has a mutualistic relationship with ants. The relationship is thought to have been used by the ants for millions of years, co-evolving to produce the right type of antibiotics.

  8. Atta cephalotes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atta_cephalotes

    Atta cephalotes is a species of leafcutter ant in the tribe Attini (the fungus-growing ants). A single colony of ants can contain up to 5 million members, and each colony has one queen that can live more than 20 years. The colony comprises different castes, known as "task partitioning", and each caste has a different job to do. [2]

  9. Escovopsis aspergilloides - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Escovopsis_aspergilloides

    These leaf-cutting ants and fungus survive in an antfungus mutualism [6] - an obligate symbiosis - in which neither can exist without the other. Ants grow the fungus - the basidiomycete cultivar - propagating it, nurturing and defending it - the fungus becomes almost their sole source of food. [7]