yes,if you watch the ant movie its shore to be true.
I ant can have up to 1 million babies if it is the queen.
After mating with the queen the ant that mats the queen dies. The queen becomes pregnent and after a few weeks she has babies.
the queen makes over 1000000 babies a day
Queen ant of course not worker, soldier OR elite soldier. But anyway the ants already captured and killed by the enemy ant ( The one that you ask) for the queen and feed it. If human, they interested in queen ant in the flight season
A queen ant can lay up to about 300,000 eggs in just a few days.
You do not need to consider the sex ratio for an ant population as the Queen ant creates all the eggs, which they hatch and become worker ants to feed the queen so the Queen can reproduce, if all the worker ants die, the Queen dies and no eggs are laid, so the sex ratio is not considered in an ant population.
No,the queen ant doesn't die when she has the eggs, because is the only one that can have the babies in the colony. When she has the eggs she continue having eggs for the colony.
An ant happens to be produced by the queen ant, and the queen ant flies to mate with a male and lays eggs.
The decomposers of the ant colony are the ants that eat the dead. Ants that die in the colony are fed to the decomposers and the queen ant. Ants are naturally decomposers because they feed off dead things.
A queen ant starts a colony of the same type of ant it is. So if the queen is a black ant queen then she will produce black ants, if she is a fire ant queen then she will produce fire ants, etc. (strange question bro)
Queen ants are born when a larva is fed a special diet called royal jelly. This diet triggers certain genes to activate, causing the larva to develop into a larger and more fertile queen instead of a worker ant. Queen ants play a crucial role in founding and maintaining ant colonies.
An ant's crop is much like any other crop. It holds food, or sometimes other things that the ant can swallow when she needs to carry it around but does not yet want to digest it. When she does need to digest it, she passes the stuff down to the stomach, just as we do, only we do not have a big oesophagus (gullet) to store our food in, so we just pass it straight onto the stomach. The sort of thing an ant keeps in its crop is liquid food, like nectar or juice. The crop is a useful way to carry such stuff. If an ant finds solid food, such as a seed or a caterpillar, she carries it in its jaws, like a dog. The liquid food in the crop she can pass onto other ants to feed them, or to feed her queen, or feed the queen's babies (grubs, otherwise known as larvae). Jon