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Ants are typically omnivorous insects with ovoid heads equipped with short mandibles, but there is great diversity in both the adaptations of their morphological and behavioral traits, as well as their dietary habits. Here, we review the variety of form and function in ant predation. Predation and scavenging were likely the plesiomorphic modes, with Cretaceous ants evolving mandibles well-suited to prey capture. In contemporary ground-dwelling species, mandible morphology can vary with adaptations to capturing particular prey as they may possess trap-jaw, snapping, or falciform mandibles characterized by their high closure speed. To capture termites or other ants, specialized ants may eliminate guards to prey on workers and brood or use allomones that cause the workers of raided nests to flee, providing access to the brood. Among arboreal ants, many species rely on vision to detect flying insects that land on their host trees. In tropical rainforests, territorially dominant arboreal ants (TDAAs) often hunt in groups, spreadeagling their prey, while venom use is noted in only a few species. Some obligate plant-ant species have developed ambush strategies for prey capture, building traps or hiding in shelters. Consequently, ants, due to their large number, their species diversity, and their capacity to live from the ground to tree crowns, regulate all kinds of arthropods through their predation. Ground-dwelling ants impact arthropods in the leaf-litter or provide biotic protection on small plants, but rarely on trees, while the TDAAs that occupy tree crowns protect their host trees from defoliating insects.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1744-7917.70088 | DOI Listing |
J R Soc Interface
September 2025
Department of Bioengineering, Imperial College London, London, UK.
Insects and plants have been locked in an evolutionary arms race spanning 350 million years. Insects evolved specialized tools to cut into plant tissue, and plants, to counter these attacks, developed diverse defence strategies. Much previous worked has focused on chemical defences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Biol
September 2025
Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering and School of Biology, Georgia Institute of Technology, 801 Ferst Drive, Atlanta, GA 30332-0405, USA. Electronic address:
Teamwork has long faced a dilemma: as team members are added, the effectiveness of each individual decreases - a phenomenon known as 'Ringelmann's effect'. A new study shows that weaver ants in pulling chains overcome Ringelmann's effect, a result that may inspire new ways to coordinate teams.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Rev Entomol
September 2025
2Department of Entomology and Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA; email:
Nutritional symbioses with microorganisms have profoundly shaped the evolutionary success of ants, enabling them to overcome dietary limitations and thrive across diverse ecological niches and trophic levels. These interactions are particularly crucial for ants with specialized diets, where microbial symbionts compensate for dietary imbalances by contributing to nitrogen metabolism, vitamin supplementation, and the catabolism of plant fibers and proteins. This review synthesizes recent advances in our understanding of ant-microbe symbioses, focusing on diversity, functional roles in host nutrition, and mechanisms of transmission of symbiotic microorganisms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Ecol
September 2025
Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Many ant species show dramatic shifts in behaviour when infected with parasites, but the molecular basis of these behavioural changes is not well understood. An example is the wood ant, Formica aserva, which serves as an intermediate host for the lancet liver fluke, Dicrocoelium dendriticum. Infected ants leave their nests during the cool hours of the day, ascend a flower and then attach themselves to a petal with their mandibles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew Phytol
September 2025
Department of Biology, University of Nevada, Reno, Reno, NV, 89557, USA.
Many plants are defended from herbivory by costly insect mutualists. Understanding positive associations between plants and mutualists requires a whole-plant perspective including roots. We hypothesized that root surface area increases with mutualist activity (to a saturation threshold) and recent rainfall but that this relationship shifts when herbivores are excluded.
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