The flying ants are superior.
They eat the same thing as normal ants. Flying ants are just inmating form so they are actually the same as normal ants. Ants eat anything that humans leave behind like crumbs ofcake and bread...etc..
The humidity & temperature have to be just right to provoke swarming. It's not the time of year-same thing for termites.
The same way you do, they put it in their mouth and swallow it, it gets digested in their stomach, and the waste is then emitted.
Leaf cutter ants go out to collect pieces of leaves that they cut off, then take what they have collected back to the nest. In the nest special worker ants prepare the leaf to grow a special fungus that grows into little lumps that the ants feed on. So you can see that what the ants eat is not flesh, but bits of fungus that they grow, much as humans grow mushrooms for food. So we say that they are not carnivores, but fungivorous or mycophagous, two words that mean the same thing: "fungus-eating".
They communicate with each other by touching their antennae with one another. If red ants come upon another ant they do so to tell if they are from the same nest.
No, ants do notsleep.
No, of course not. Bullet ants are the most poisonous ants in the world and the bull ants *not bulldog* are the most dangerous.
if ants had the same intelligance as humans it would be really weird because how can that little ant can be as intelligant as us?! weird huh?
Yes, some species of wasps do return to the same nest.
Pterodactylus were pterosaurs, and although pterosaurs are often called "flying dinosaurs," they were not dinosaurs. Pterosaurs were flying reptiles that lived at the same time as dinosaurs, but they don't share the same common ancestor as dinosaurs and thus don't fall into the clade Dinosauria.
No.
Most species of ants defend their nests against other ants, whether of the same species or not. As a rule they keep away from strange nests and can tell their own nest by the way it smells different from strange nests. If one colony does in fact invade a strange nest, there will usually be a fight with many ants being killed; when that happens one of the colonies might be wiped out, with the eggs and larvae being eaten by the victors or taken home as "slaves". In either case, no super colony results.Sometimes because of inbreeding the different ant colonies smell so much alike that the smells do not set the ants fighting. When that happens ants move perfectly happily between colonies and a nest might include many queens. An example is when Argentine ants (the species Linepithema humile) invade a new country or an island because humans accidentally transported them. The result sometimes is that only one Argentine ant colony is imported and their young are so inbred that they form super colonies and kill all the local ants because the local ants are not inbred and so do not form super colonies and the Argentine ants outnumber them and kill them.