No, chocolate is not poisonous for ants.
Both carpenter ants and acrobat ants will bite. The carpenter ant rarely bites a human and they are not poisonous. The acrobat ant is quick to bite and this can cause pain and itching but they are not poisonous.
yes
No, of course not. Bullet ants are the most poisonous ants in the world and the bull ants *not bulldog* are the most dangerous.
yes i was bit by one
Red ants are not poisonous. Whilst they may be very irratating, and sitting on a red ants nest is far from pleasurable, red ants are not poisonous to humans. Red ants are aggressive and territorial, but to humans no real threat.
happy ones :)
try spraying poisonous gas
Yes pickle is piosonous to the fire ant
There are hundreds or thousands of kinds of ants called red ants, and some of them contain more poisons and worse poisons than others. Most things are a little poisonous, sometimes more than a little, for example cigarettes. Some of the kinds of beans we eat are so poisonous that when rats ate them uncooked, they got ill and in a couple of weeks they died. Other kinds would not kill anybody even if we ate them raw, but they still do contain a little poison. It is like that with ants. Most ants contain at least a little formic acid, which is nasty, and rather poisonous, while some kinds are nearly one third formic acid. Other kinds of ants contain far more dangerous poisons; the reason that poison-arrow frogs are poisonous, is the ants that they eat; if you take some of the tadpoles and raise them without poisonous food like the kinds of ants they eat, they grow up without producing any arrow poison. So, you could argue that red ants are poisonous, and so are black ants, but they are not generally so poisonous that we are more interested in their poison than in the way they can bite and sting. And by the way, the reason that ant stings hurt is that they inject poison.
They eat Daddy long legs spiders, tiny grasshoppers, also other small spiders that are not poisonous and probably the easiest to get them is ants. They like ants.
According to the 'dietary hypothesis' frogs eat fire ants and sequester the toxins as a protective measure: that is why they are poisonous. In captivity, when they have a different diet, they aren't poisonous.