Ants may lay pheromone trails when travelling from the nest to food, or from food to the nest, or when travelling in either direction depending on the species. They also follow these trails with a allegiance which is a function of the trail strength, among other variables. Ants drop pheromones as they walk by stopping briefly and touching their gaster, which carries the pheromone secreting gland, on the ground. The strength of the trail they lay is a function of the rate at which they make deposits, and the amount per deposit. Since pheromones evaporate and diffuse away, the strength of the trail when it is encountered by another ant is a function of the original strength, and the time since the trail…
Observations: The Velvet Ant is actually a wasp. "Velvet Ant" is the common name for any of a family of wasps whose appearance is similar to that of large furry ants. The wasps live primarily in deserts and hot, semiarid environments. There are thousands of species of Velvet Ants throughout the world, including nearly 500 species in North America alone. All Velvet Ants in North America are parasites. They invade the nest of bees and other wasps, then lay their eggs in the host's cocoon. As adults, the ants feed on green shrubs, cacti, and other available plants.…
“On leaving the old nest, the swarm normally flies only a few meters and settles. Scout bees look for a suitable place to start the new colony. Eventually, one location wins favor and the whole swarm takes to the air”(34)…
Of course the economy of the ants is a command economy, and everyone has to work towards "the good of the colony". The main ant that controls the army would always put that in the Antz mind to always stay together and work all the time. In this movie they don’t have a government but that’s why the colony is so manipulated by the main ant that controls the army. They need the Government because it has the ultimate authority to decide how conflicts will be resolved and how benefits and privileges will be allocated. The Antz only had one authority and would always obey that authority because…
12 http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/231/4743/127813 http://science.discovery.com/tv-schedules/special.html?paid=48.13784.23608.0.014 "The Ants"- award winning15 http://www.sasionline.org/antsfiles/pages/honeyants/honey.html16 http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/14456898/17 http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200603/s1589516.htm18 http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200603/s1589516.htmCover page http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/01/Leafcutter_ants_transporting_leaves.jpgFigure 1 http://www.ces.ncsu.edu/chatham/ag/SustAg/velvetant.htmlFigure 2 http://www.infiniteworld.org/sirena/images/sirena_1.htmFigure 3 http://www.sphoto.com/photo.php?photo=875&exhibition=15&pass=public&size=default⟨=engFigure 4 http://www.pbase.com/crocodile/image/32362188Figure 5 http://www.dkimages.com/discover/DKIMAGES/Discover/Home/Animals/Invertebrates/Arthropods/Insects/Bees-Wasps-Ants-and-Sawflies/Ants/Species/African-Driver-Ant/Male/Male-1.htmlFigure 6 http://www.antfarmz.net/html/jack_jumper_ants.htmlFigure 7 http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Mehmet_KaratayFigure 8 http://weirdfoods.blogspot.com/2008/04/honeypot-ants.htmlFigure 9 http://www.abc.net.au/reslib/200603/r75784_214295.jpg…
In “Mega Marketing of Depression,” Ethan Watters talks about how culture of depression was evolved in Japan. Steven Johnson in “The Myth of the Ant Queen” talks about the pattern which were used to develop organized complexity. In “The Power of the Context,” Malcolm Gladwell talks about the circumstances which were responsible in changing individual’s behavior. Although, all of these essays are related to each other, culture or community doesn’t determine individual behavior rather individuals determine the culture.…
Mitosis is the division of the ______, while cytokinesis is the division of the ______.…
There are a lot of crazy animals out there, but these cartoon creatures are so strange-looking that you just might not believe they're real. Mother nature can have a bizarre sense of humor, and these animals are proof of exactly that. Prepare to have your mind blown below.…
The ant colony, which is the movie’s source of struggle and triumph, represents a typical old traditional economy. The ants relied on the fruits of their own labor. In other words, they are farmers like the other third-world countries in our today’s world. However, the time came when they no longer farm for themselves anymore. Since the beginning of the movie, the ants had to spend all of their time grazing for the grasshoppers. This is a classical depiction of a powerful nation discovering an isolated country and exploiting them. The grasshoppers exploited the ants for their labor by threatening to not protecting them from the other insects if the ants do not continue collecting for their offering. The concept of collecting crops represents to an old traditional economy of religion. The offering is similar to presenting food and other sacrifices to the gods to please them.…
Deep down in a dry, open field in southwestern United states, there were a ‘’Cow killer’’ which most of the people might not know they’re still exist. They fooled people by their look, people called them ants but they are actually wasps. They hunt big animal even though they only be able to grow up to length of 8 millimeters and to the height of 2 to 3 millimeters tall. Now people wonder why they don’t team up just like the others type of ants. Back to the time that they were unknown, Cow killer ued to be the most dangerous ant before it was ‘’Bulldog Ant.’’…
They consist of over 98% of the colony's population. Although the worker bees they never mate, the workers possess organs necessary for carrying out the many duties essential to the colony. They have a longer tongue than the queen and drones to help them suck pollen from flowers. Their stomachs are something else. A worker be can eat nectar and have it in her and then turns in into honey. An average hard working bee will make up to 1/12 of a teaspoon in its entire life time. Her legs also have pollen baskets on their legs to transport the pollen to the hive. The kind of work performed by the worker depends largely upon her age. The first three weeks of her adult life, during which she is referred to as a house bee, she is devoted to stay within the hive so that her wings can dry out and grow strong so that she can then leave the hive to find pollen (stone). The male bee is called a drone, drones only have one purpose and is the only male bee in the colony. The drone population is very slim, drones may only number in the hundreds even when the colony is doing its best. Drones are the only males in the colony and are not self-reliant and must be feed and cared for by the worker bees. He is allowed to remain in the hive only because he is needed to mate with a new virgin queen when the old queen dies. When the queen is about one week old that is when she fly’s up 200 to 300 feet in the air to mate.…
In 2012, 16259 people in the United States were murdered and another 1.8 million people were sent to the hospital due to assault. Humans resorting to violence and harming others is a daily occurrence, but why? Is it in our nature, are we instinctively violent, and why is it that these acts are not only happening in the United States but worldwide. Although the average person does not leave their home planning on harming somebody that day, under the right circumstances almost every single person in this world will commit an act of violence. Sometimes these acts are justified, such as when we are trying to protect ourselves or a loved one, but what about the smaller acts that we all do every day. Whether it is killing the spider you see crawling on the wall, or the bee flying around simply trying to do its job. We do not see these as acts of violence but in there essence they are. Why is it that our first instinct is to kill them when they are not causing us any harm? Howard Fast builds on this idea within the theme of his short story The Large Ant, where the narrator kills a creature that resembles an ant, purely out of instinct.…
The social structure of ants is a very complex and interesting one. They live together in underground colonies where they divide labor amongst each individual and work as a cohesive unit. “Scientists estimate that there are about 20,000 different ant species roaming the Earth today (Binns, 2006).” While each species is unique in looks, habitat and food intake, they all share a unified behavior. Of all social insects ants are amongst the highest developed, their families or colonies are divided up into a defined caste system which consists of the queen ant, worker ants and drones. Further investigation into the fascinating life of these little creatures shows how they care for the young, reproduce, and benefit from generation overlap while maintaining very complex living quarters.…
We use the term classical conditioning to describe one type of associative learning in which there is no contingency between response and reinforcer. This situation resembles most closely the experiment from Pavlov in the 1920s, where he trained his dogs to associate a bell ring with a food-reward (Ryle 1995). In such experiments, the subject initially shows weak or no response to a conditioned stimulus (CS, e.g. the bell), but a measurable unconditioned response (UCR, e.g. saliva production) to an unconditioned stimulus (UCS, e.g. food). In the course of the training, the CS is repeatedly presented together with the UCS; eventually the subject forms an association between the US and the CS. In a subsequent test-phase, the subject will show the conditioned response (CR, e.g. saliva production) to the CS alone, if such an association has been established and memorized. Such Pavlovian conditioning is opposed to instrumental or operant, where producing a CR controls the UCS presentations (Ryle 1995). Therefore, classical conditioning involves learning by association - where you simply learn by associating two events that often occur together.…
process of making their own food, take in the carbon dioxide we give off and provide the…