Thursday, December 8, 2011
6:19 AM
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Ant
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News update
By Daily Mail Reporter

Not budging: The tiny ant refuses to move as the wet rolling marble comes towards him
These fascinating pictures have captured the hilarious antics of a stubborn ant who refuses to move out of the way of a rolling marble.
The brilliant little critter refused to be fazed by the giant obstacle which formed a shape like a bubble due to rain.
The tiny ant must have thought he was losing his own marbles when - despite his best attempts - the towering 'bubble' just wouldn't burst.
Attack: The brave ant decides to climb on top of the marble which due to the rain water gives off the appearance of a giant bubble
The hilarious images were captured by amateur snapper Teguh Santosa outside his home in Indonesia in January.
Mr Santosa had placed marbles on a wall to try and divert the marching ants towards him - but this one refused to be moved as a marble set off down a slope.
Instead the brave ant tried to 'burst' the glass ball, before storming over the top - even pausing on top to look at the view.
The 49-year-old spotted the ant attempting to stop the marble and quickly grabbed his camera to catch the hilarious moment.
Mr Santosa said: 'This photo was taken on a wall wet with rain. I put the marbles on the walls and it formed a shape like a bubble.
'My intention was to redirect the ants around the marbles to I could photograph them close up.
Frustrated: The ant just can't get the 'bubble' to burst as he tramples all over it
'But this one refused to do so and just went over it.'
Amateur photographer Mr Santosa who began taking pictures 20 years ago with a loaned camera, got up at 6am to catch the ants on their morning hunt for food in his garden.
He added: 'For me ants are very expressive animals. Ant's movement seem to be the personification of man.
'Photographing ants require patience, because their beauty lies in the funny moments, which you have to wait around for.'
source:dailymail
Thursday, May 12, 2011
8:01 PM
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New update
By DAILY MAIL REPORTER

Talent: It's a safe bet that if this was an audition, this ant is through to the next round
It's like an audition for Insect's Got Talent - marvel at the amazing photograph of a fire ant performing a break-dancing move.
Robertus Agung Sudiatmoko captured the pose when a trail of fire ants passed near him in the small village of Cibinong, Indonesia.
He took lots of incredible snaps, but the most spectacular was undoubtedly the dancing ant, which unexpectedly hoisted itself up onto one of its right-hand legs for a staggering 30 seconds.
In another of Robertus' shots, one ant stands on top of a mini mountain, crossing his arms in prayer.
And just like the infamous biblical scene in which Moses receives the Ten Commandments from God, rays of light shoot from the sky, illuminating the tiny praying ant.
Another shows the animal’s super-human strength as it lifts a gigantic leaf - that measures more than 10 times its height - above its head, which is easily carried along on the ant’s journey.
Astonishingly, these pictures were Robertus’s very first attempt at close-up photography.
Robertus, who lives in Jakarta, said: ‘I only started doing macro shots in September, after saving up for the equipment - but I wanted to capture the best shots of the ant that I possibly could.
‘Then suddenly, when I least expected it, the ant just lifted itself on to its leg in a break dancing pose.
‘I've never ever break danced myself but instantly it reminded me of that.
‘I was really happy when I looked back through my shots to see the ant dancing as I was worried I had missed it.
‘For my first go it was a good shot - it will be hard to better that.’
On a wing and a prayer: This ant seems to have found religion
He added: ‘I took the pictures when a group of us got together hunting for good macro photo opportunities.
‘I was really desperate to get a good first shot so stood out in a rain storm waiting for the ants to come back out once the sun reappeared.’
Robertus, 29, who captured the astonishing images on his trusty Canon 40D with a 100mm macro lens attached, added: ‘I like ants because they are so independent - living and working together.
‘Ants are just like humans in that they are very organised and all go to work.
‘In larger colonies the sterile ringless females form groups of workers, soldiers or other specialised groups just like us.
‘They are simply fascinating.’
Leaf it out: Ants can easily carry many times their own weight
Robertus has shown the fire ant in their possible light, but rile them and you’d very sorry. They possess a fearsome sting that victims have likened to being burnt by fire – hence their name.
What’s more, the fire ant uses its pincers to lock itself onto its prey so it can inflict the maximum number of stings.
Each fire ant nest normally contains several hundred thousand insects and sometimes multiple queens.
The U.S spends a staggering $5million a year combating fire ants and treating people they’ve stung.
source :dailymail
Monday, April 11, 2011
8:13 PM
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ms.tk
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Ant
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News update
By DAILY MAIL REPORTER

The hard-working ant balances a huge yellow petal above its head as it marches on its hind legs back to its nest
This hard-working ant balances a huge yellow petal above its head as it marches along on its hind legs.
The 1cm-long insect carries food and flowers left for him by photographer Andiyan Lutfi under a mango tree near his house.
The red ant used the material to build a nest before queuing with other workers to quench his thirst on water droplets caught on an over-hanging branch.
Andiyan, 36, snaps away as the ants go about their day-to-day lives in Cibinong Village, Indonesia.
He said: 'I observe the amazing behaviour of the ants under the mango tree almost every day.
'I like to take photographs of the ants to show how extraordinary they are. They can work well as a team or as individuals.
'The ants take leaves or whatever else there is under the tree and make a nest out of them.
'These photos show a male ant biting into a yellow petal I gave him and taking it to their nest. They will bite into anything I give them.
'The female, or queen ant, usually stays in the nest.' The red ants, known locally as Rang-rang, live in colonies where each has their own role as either worker, drone or queen.
The colony is so important to the creatures that they would sacrifice themselves to protect their home.
source: dailymail
Thursday, March 31, 2011
8:10 PM
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Ant
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Science and Tech
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Wasp
By MATT BLAKE

Angry wasp: Instead of finding his own food, the barb-tailed bully swoops in, sweeps them up and airdrops the ants elsewhere before guzzling their tasty haul himself
He should really mind his own buzz-ness, but this angry wasp's not going to listen to a tiny ant's terrified pleas.
Instead of finding his own food, the barb-tailed bully swoops in, sweeps them up and airdrops the ants elsewhere before guzzling their tasty haul himself.
Sometimes they return in greater numbers to reclaim the lost meal, biting and spitting acid at their resilient mugger. But the determined wasp just picks them up again and dumps them further away - and from a greater height.
And he's not the only one of his kind to use his superior size to muscle smaller competitors away from a feast.
Scientists at Victoria University, in Wellington, New Zealand, say wasps have developped the tactic to gain access to food they wouldn't otherwise have.
Determined: Sometimes the ants return in greater numbers in a bid to reclaim the lost meal, biting and spitting acid at their giant mugger. But the determined wasp just picks them up again and dumps them further away
They made the startling discovery by studying interactions between native ants and invasive wasps in South Island beech forests.
Videotapes taken at bait stations show that wasps frustrated by having to compete with ants will pick them up in their mandibles, fly off and drop them away from the food.
As the number of ants on the food increases, so does the frequency of ant-dropping and the distance the ants are taken.
For the ants, say researchers Dr Phil Lester and Dr Julien Grangier, the experience is the human equivalent of being thrown up to half the length of a football field.
The ants are not physically hurt but appear stunned by the drop and often do not return to the bait station.
The wasp, Vespula vulgaris, is on the list of the world’s 100 worst invasive species and reaches the highest known density in South Island beech forests.
There, when competing for food, they dominate just about every animal except native ants.
'Despite being 200 times smaller,' said Dr Lester, 'the ants are able to hold their own by rushing at the wasps, spraying them with acid and biting them. Eventually the wasps get so angry they pick up the ant, take it away and return to eat the food.
Tactics: Wasps often drop the competitor from a great height which doesn't always hurt but they often decide not to come back
'The strategy works. It’s giving the wasp access to resources it wouldn’t otherwise have.'
Dr Grangier added: 'To the best of our knowledge this behaviour has never been observed before.
'Our results suggest that these insects can assess the degree and type of competition they are facing and adapt their behaviour accordingly.
'It’s a new interaction between a native and an invasive species and a wonderful example of behavioural plasticity.'
He says the wasps’ ability to tune their behaviour according to the abundance and identity of competitors could help explain why they are so widespread and invasive.
The research findings are published today in the Royal Society journal Biology Letters, one of the world’s leading publications in the field of biological sciences.
Dr Lester says other data gathered during the research suggests that ants may actually attract wasps in the first place.
'Wasps seem to hear ants "talking". They have nerves in their antennae that pick up pheromones or communication chemicals given out by the ants. So it could be the foraging ants that bring wasps to the food resource. Once there, they adjust their behaviour according to the level of competition imposed by these ants,' he added.
source: dailymail