No. No true ant lives alone; they all live in colonies. The wingless wasps called velvet ants do live alone (we say that they are solitary) but they are not really ants.
The closest you can come to a real ant that lives alone is a species called Anergates atratulus. The queen invades the nest of other ants of a kind called Tetramorium caespitumand kills their queen. Their workers then look after the new queen and feed her till they die. She lays eggs that hatch into more Anergates queen larvae, but her eggs do not grow into workers, so when the Tetramorium workers die of old age, the Anergates queen dies too. So you could say that she lived alone, without her workers, but at least she did not, and could not, live without the other Tetramorium workers. I don't call that living alone.
No no nooooo
a lone wolf like a wolf lives alone like an ant but may diverse with other ants if it wants to mate
Termites
There are many insects that are attracted to rotting wood. This includes termites, ladybugs, carpenter ants, and powder post beetles.
White ants are actually considered termites. They are primarily found in Australia. On a side not: where ever they are hungry and there is wood around ....Beware!
They group together
Only Wood Ants.
Ants are a species who are small and they are quite sure that they cannot manage to do anything alone. Therefore, they live together in big or small groups to support each other.
Theres a kinda ant, called wood ants that lives in weeping willows.
Yes ants live in large groups they are called colonies
where do thief ants live
wood.