Order Hymenoptera
Family Formicidae
Ants along with bees and wasps comprise the Order Hymenoptera. There is only one family, Formicidae, which encompass all the species of ants. All of them are very alike morphologically speaking. They are social and live in numerous colonies. They communicate with each other through chemical substances and also olfactory and tactile signals.
The nest if ormed with queens, males and a great number of workers. Only males and females are apterous and at the beginning of spring they abandon the nest to take part in the nuptial flight. Males and females mate, after which males die.
The nest if ormed with queens, males and a great number of workers. Only males and females are apterous and at the beginning of spring they abandon the nest to take part in the nuptial flight. Males and females mate, after which males die.
Ants can be carnivores and may hunt animals bigger than they themselves. They can also be herbivores like those which collect seeds, grind then and mix them with saliva to prepare a bread mass, the food of the colony. The leaf cutters cultivate mushrooms from the processed vegetal material. Others depend exclusively on the honeydew from aphids with which they keep a simbiotic relationship: honeydew in exchange of protection.