Black Garden Ant 5A-1

Similar documents
Let s Learn About Insects!

Yellowjacket Habitat at Home

pronunciation Summary Article: Termites from DK Eyewitness Books: Insect

PROJECT: EGGS OF ANT

A Beacon Media resource

Aq buggin we re BUGGIN

Welcome to our Insect Power Point Presentation

Fly and Cockroach-2A-2

All You Ever Wanted to Know About Hornets and Yellowjackets

The Mouse You Can Trust! ENVIROGUARD PEST SOLUTIONS

So Many Insects! Part 1 Worksheet

Days and Tasks. Ellen Miller December 2015

STINGING ARTHROPODS AROUND HOMES & LANDSCAPES

Science of Life Explorations

Solenopsis geminata (Tropical Fire Ant)

Have you ever Met a Morphosis?

T W TH F. Week: Activities: Week: M. Vocabulary: Ant Nest Larva Egg Pupa Cocoon Queen Head Thorax Abdomen. Extension Activities: Evaluation:

African Killer Bee. Bald Faced Hornet. Bumble Bee

(ii) We know a number of facts about an ant s life because

LASIUS NIGER (3) COLONY JOURNAL

Amazing Animals. Ready for Cold Weather 153 words. Ants in Action 248 words. Amazing Animals 235 words. Scaly or Slimy? 204 words

Doug Scull s SCIENCE & NATURE

What is an Insect? The thorax contains powerful muscles that operate the legs and/or wings.

Single-Queen-Founded Nests

4. List 3 characteristics of all arthropods. a. b. c. 5. Name 3 main arthropod groups.

An Interactive PowerPoint presentation about the life cycle of a mealworm!

Nature Club. Insect Guide. Make new friends while getting to know your human, plant and animal neighbours!

Biodiversity Trail Birds and Insects

SUPREME QUALITY ITALIAN HONEY THE WORLD OF BEES, AN OPEN STORY

Flip through the next few pages for a checklist of five of the more common, sinister summer scoundrels that you ll find throughout Arizona!

Yellowjackets and Other Wasps Ecology Publication #97-427

What do these strange words mean?

Reproducing: Cockroaches hatch from eggs. See if you can spot the smallest cockroach in the enclosure.

Study Questions. to Wonderful Wasps. naturalists. Young

ì<(sk$m)=bdhiaa< +^-Ä-U-Ä-U

Phylum Arthropoda. Chapter 13 Part 2 of 3

This Coloring Book has been adapted for the Wildlife of the Table Rocks

Honey Bees. Anatomy and Function 9/26/17. Similar but Different. Honey Bee External Anatomy. Thorax (Human Chest): 4 Wings & 6 Legs

Yellowjackets. Colorado Insects of Interest

People hunt reptiles for their skin. It is used to make leather products like belts, shoes or handbags. A reptile s body

Which came first, The Mosquito. Or the Egg?

What is your minibeast?

Teacher Workbooks. Language Arts Series Alphabet Skills Insects Theme, Vol. 1

ENGL-4 Echo Lake_Adams_Nonfiction Practice 1

Your Guide To DEFENDING YOUR HOME. Against RATS & MICE

Rural Training Center Thailand (RTC-TH) REEEPP

Helpful or Harmful? Stinging Insects, Oh! My!

Forest Characters T E AC H ER PAG E. Directions: Print out the cards double-sided, so that the picture is on one side and the text on the other.

BEES AND WASPS IDENTIFICATION

Grasshopper Dissection

CHRONICLE INSECTS. The Wide World Of. July 2011 Issue 1. In This Issue:

EGG STAGE. 1. How many eggs does a female Monarch usually lay on one milkweed plant? Given a choice, what age plant, or leaves, does she prefer?

Insect Life Cycle. Visit for thousands of books and materials.

Name Class Date. After you read this section, you should be able to answer these questions:

GARDEN LASIUS FLAVUS COLONY

Scorpion Flies Swarm North Texas

Tamim Ansary. Illustrations by Derrick Williams

The platypus lives in streams, ponds, and rivers in Australia. It closes its eyes under water and uses its bill to dig in the mud to find its food.

Nat Geo Notes for: How do Living Things Survive and Change?

Arizona s Raptor Experience, LLC

ant mier How do I say the word in:

All about snakes. What are snakes? Are snakes just lizards without legs? If you want to know more

ABSTRACT GLOSSARY OF TERMS. Layman Description

Morphology of a female bee

MONSANTO INSECTARIUM Scavenger Hunt GRADES K-3

Most amphibians begin life as aquatic organisms and then live on land as adults.

What made the Ladybird Bad-tempered? A rural science teaching resource for primary schools

3 4 The Egyptian plover is a type of bird that will eat parasites and bits of meat from the skin and teeth of the Nile crocodile. The bird can often b

The Year of the Wasp

Going Buggy by Guy Belleranti

What animals other than humans have the greatest impact

The honey bee colony. by C Roff

Great Science Adventures

A Beekeeping Diary #5: Early Summer Queen Rearing Begins. Written by KirkWebster

Rainforest. These are some tree in the rain forest. By: Ben, Aslam, Demetrius

An Example of Classification

What do we do when the butterfly larvae arrive? How can we tell how much the larvae have grown?

( ) w w w. l o y a l t y l a w n c a r e. c o m

Animal Adaptations Woodland Animal Fact Sheet

Print Partner Pack. Read for the Record 2012

Splits. Aiken Beekeepers Association July 2016 S. Siler

My insect. Time: 2 hours

Mosquito Activity Book

Nematoda. Round worms Feeding and Parasitism

The Brower Times. Who Am I? My Birthday Weekend

Amazing arthropods. Kindergarten-Second. Life Science TEKS. Life Science Vocabulary

INTRODUCTION The word Arthropoda means "jointed legs". Insects, crabs, spiders, millipedes and centipedes are all

NHFG / VICTOR YOUNG PHOTO USFWS PHOTO

Who Am I? What are some things you can do to help protect my home? Track: Ohio Department of Natural Resources Photo: Cottonwood Canyons Foundation

Unit 19.3: Amphibians

Insect Pests of Food Establishments

Fishes, Amphibians, Reptiles

Questions The word species in the first sentence is closest in meaning to A. mates. B. varieties. C. killers. D. enemies.

Types of Legs Scientific Background

RED CAT READING. Leveled Reading Assessment

Phylum Chordata. Fish, Amphibians, Reptiles

Family Soricidae Masked shrew Southeastern shrew (long-tailed shrews)

Superior Snakes. By: Jake Elliott Richards

Wonders of Nature. Wonders of Nature J O R LEVELED READER O. Visit for thousands of books and materials.

Identifying Plant and Animal Adaptations Answer Key

Transcription:

Black Garden Ant 5A-1 Hi there, everybody. Because I m one of the most common insects on the planet, I m sure you know that I m an ant. But, did you realize how much my cousins and I look like a wasp? Take a close look.

Ant and Wasp 5A-2 See how slender, or thin, our waists are? Mine is unusually flexible, making it easy to bend and twist. Count my body parts. You ll see that I have three, just like all other insects my head with its long antennae, my thorax, and my abdomen.

Ant and Wasp 5A-2 Here s something you might not know: I have two stomachs! Both are located in my abdomen, but one is for my own digestion and the other, called the crop, is just a storage bin where I keep food for other ants.

Ant and Wasp 5A-2 The fact that I store food for other ants should tell you something about me. Ants are social insects. We raise and care for our young in ant colonies. There are many different kinds of ants with many different ways of life.

Collage of Ants 5A-3 Carpenter ants build their nests in wood. Leafcutter ants grow fungus on the leaves they cut in vast, or very large, underground gardens. The aggressive weaver ants live in leaves they bind together in trees. The huge colonies of army ants travel in groups, eating everything in sight. Trap-jaw ants can jump distances of more than twelve inches! Harvester ants build huge nest mounds where they store seeds. Beware of the red fi re ants they sting!

Collage of Ants 5A-3 I am a black garden ant, the type that you may see most often, so that is the kind of ant I am going to tell you about today. Like many other ants, we live in underground tunnels, or passageways.

Underground ant tunnels with chambers 5A-4 Bees have honeycombs, paper wasps have paper nests, and we have tunnels miles and miles of tunnels, full of little chambers, or rooms hundreds of very dark chambers. A colony may have as few as twelve ants or as many as a million or more. The center of an ant colony s life is this nest of tunnels.

Winged Queen Ant 5A-5 An ant colony begins with the queen. A young queen is born in one colony but leaves that colony to start her own. Her wings carry her into the air to find a mate. Once she mates, she sheds her wings and immediately finds a nesting place underground. There she builds a chamber and seals herself inside to lay her eggs.

Stages of Development: egg, larva, pupa, emerging adult 5A-6 When ant larvae hatch, the queen cares for the first brood herself, feeding them with her own saliva as they change from wormlike larvae into pupae and, finally, adults. The queen does not leave the nest this whole time, getting nutrition from her now useless wing muscles in order to survive.

Stages of Development: egg, larva, pupa, emerging adult 5A-6 Ants undergo a complete metamorphosis. Most of the eggs develop into small female worker ants that begin their lifetime of hard work by gathering food for the queen, making sure she is well fed. The queen will never leave the nest again, living there for ten to twenty years, perhaps even longer. As the mother of the colony, she has her own special chamber. Her only job from this point on is to lay eggs.

Worker ants feeding larvae 5A-7 The worker ants carry the eggs from the queen s chamber into nurseries where they keep the eggs clean and moist by licking them until they hatch. Then they carry the larvae into separate chambers to feed them.

Worker ants feeding larvae 5A-7 Black ants eat other insects, any crumbs that we can find, and the honeydew of aphids. We chew the food up well and put it in a pouch in our mouths where the liquid is squeezed out of it. We spit out the solid parts and swallow the liquid. Remember, we have two stomachs, one being a crop for storing food, so worker ants come back to the nest with crops full of food for the young.

Ant Pupae 5A-8 As they grow, the larvae molt a few times and after a few weeks they spin cocoons. The worker ants move these newly formed pupae into much drier chambers where they rest until they are ready to gnaw their way out into the world.

Ant Pupae 5A-8 As social insects, ants cooperate in many ways. When these new workers emerge, some will help care for the queen and larvae, and some will build and repair the tunnels, but others will guard the nest.

Soldier ant guarding a nest 5A-9 These guards, called soldier ants, have larger heads and jaws than the other ants, and they place their bodies across the entrance to the nest to defend the colony. All ants, including soldier ants, emit chemical signals that other ants smell with their antennae. Soldier ants use these signals to warn the colony of danger. This is one way that ants communicate, or share information.

Ants Communicating 5A-10 Another way ants communicate is through touch. If an ant is hungry, it taps a food gatherer lightly with its antennae to let it know that it would like to eat.

Ants Communicating 5A-10 They exchange the food mouth-tomouth in what looks like little kisses. When food is shared, the ants also share and pass along some chemical information important for the entire colony. If one of us ants gets trapped when the soil around us caves in, we produce a squeaky sound by rubbing joints together and other ants hear the cry for help through their legs.

Termites and Cockroach 5A-11 Before I leave, I want to introduce you to another social insect that some people mistakenly call white ants. Do you think these look like ants? They re not. They are termites. Termites are more closely related to cockroaches and yet they do not have hard exoskeletons. They are soft-bodied and nearly blind. They would not survive as solitary insects on their own, but they are very successful social insects.

Termites and Cockroach 5A-11 There are several differences between termites and the other social insects you have learned about honeybees, paper wasps, and ants. Termites do not go through as many stages of development. They skip the pupa stage so their metamorphosis is incomplete.

Termite Queen 5A-12 The termite society is a bit different as well. Both a king and a queen rule termite colonies. They start a colony together. The queen is the most important member of the colony, sometimes laying six or seven thousand eggs a day. She is so well protected by the countless numbers of worker termites that it is almost impossible to find her within the colony. Just in case something should happen to the royal couple, termite colonies include substitute kings and queens as well.

Termite Soldiers 5A-13 Termite workers perform similar jobs to the worker ants, but the job of guarding the colony rests with a small number of soldiers, equipped with strong legs and long powerful jaws. Unlike honeybees, paper wasps, and ants, where all the workers are female, in the termite colonies, both male and female workers are important members of the society.

Termites chewing on wood 5A-14 Termites favorite food is wood. They can be very destructive if they choose to eat through the walls of a house! Depending on where they live, some termite species eat insects, waste materials, and fungus. They build their temperature-controlled nests underground, inside fallen trees, in timber, and in tree branches.

Termites nest in a tree and termite mound 5A-15 Does this nest look a bit like a wasp nest? I think so. It s made of chewed wood and saliva like the wasp nest, but with added mud and soil. Some termites build mounds above ground to house their colonies. These towering mud structures are hard as rock and some are as tall as a two-story house. Lots of teamwork goes into building these mounds with incredible air-conditioning systems to keep the chambers cool in very hot climates. Next time you ll hear from an insect that glows in the dark. Until then, be thinking about who that might be.