tags: ants, hymenoptera, excavating ant city, nature, science, streaming video
This fascinating video details how a scientist learns what an ant colony looks like in the wild -- it's astonishing how big these things can get [3:16]
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tags: ants, The Secret Megalopolis of the Ants, ant nest, streaming video
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tags: The Ant Whisperer, ants, hymenoptera, pheromones, EO Wilson, behavioral ecology, sociobiology, evolution, streaming video
Because I do not own a television, I was thrilled to find that Lord of the Ants, the Nova program that aired on PBS tonight, is freely available as a streaming video. This…
fascinating stuff, but I can't help feeling sorry for the ants :-(
i don't know this for a fact, but according to the notes accompanying this video, the ant nest was abandoned.
Amazing. I was also wondering about the ants--thanks for the info.
"... the anonymous graduate students labor intensely for
the good of the super organism. The students move tons of earth, shovel-full by patient shovel-full. At the end, scarcely conceivable, lies the intangible reward. This complex behavior may seem strange to us, but in the world of the graduate student, no task is too Herculean..."
A nice project. But as an entomologist, I want to know what species of ant was investigated. Genus and species would be good. Also I assume this happened in Africa somewhere - Where?
I believe it was Prof. Walter Tschinkel of Florida State U. who developed the techniques for making plaster and metal casts of ant nests. There are some great photos here.
Fascinating. However, to destroy a living colony in the name of science seems harsh and unnecessary, especially with the tools available to us today - such as infrared and sonic mapping. Surely they could have achieved the same thing without killing millions of innocent creatures! How old was that colony? How long will it take the ants that escaped to rebuild? So sad.