millions of ants can live in a single colony.
Millions of Ants can live in one ant hill.
i would have to say about 10 trillion ants live in an anthill. i would not doubt that the number i have gave you is extremely off but i hope i have helped you out. buhbye govna.
over 2 approxemently25,000
10000 in 1 ant hill
Chug
It's a colony of ants or a nest of ants. If we say an ants' colony, or ants' nest, it's the place where they live. marie
Ants evolved many millions of years ago. In fact, the first ant fossils are from the late Cretaceous (by the end of the Dinosaur era), some 65 million years ago. Ants provide many benefits to the ecosystem. Many ants are scavengers, or omnivores. That means that they can eat many types of food, such as dead or live insects, nectar from plants, or honeydew, which are little sugary droplets coming out of aphids. If things were not eaten by other things they would hang around a lot longer. Other ants are herbivores, which means that they only eat plants, such as the leaf-cutter ants. Leaf cutter ants cut leaves from plants and take them to the nest. Inside the nest the leaves are chopped into smaller pieces by small ants, and put into fungus gardens. In these gardens lives a fungus that digests the leaves the ants bring into the nest. The ants then eat small "fruits", called fruiting bodies, that are produced by the fungus. The fungus can only live in ant nests, and nests cannot live without their fungus. This is called mutualism. Other ants are predators, meaning that they only hunt live insects.
Hey! I Know! That's an "ant hill" out in the yard. It's also called a colony of ants.
Millions
The American Bald Eagle, the Osprey and many other large birds. http://www.baldeagleinfo.com/ http://www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/BirdGuide/Osprey.html
ants live in Sand and bird nest.
It's a colony of ants or a nest of ants. If we say an ants' colony, or ants' nest, it's the place where they live. marie
The flying ants are superior.
Many ants live in tunnels underground or under rocks, stones and pavement. Ants also have nest inside trees trunks and branches, weave ant silk nests on trees, use leaves to form their nests. Many small ant species live in the crack of rock, floors and walls of houses. Some even live in pile of newspaper or between books or among fabric.
Yes, because they don't want any one messing with their nest.
Ants, bees, dung beetles, and quite many more...
Ants come in from outside through tiny open spaces. Many of them will build a nest in the walls of a house and reproduce continuously.
Yes , Harvester ants do burrow to make out a nest .
Yes, ants probably do get mad if you destroy their nest, but they are not aggressive so you really won't be able to tell.
it is called a nest
no anteaters don't like nest ants get in it and they do not like ants
Ants evolved many millions of years ago. In fact, the first ant fossils are from the late Cretaceous (by the end of the Dinosaur era), some 65 million years ago. Ants provide many benefits to the ecosystem. Many ants are scavengers, or omnivores. That means that they can eat many types of food, such as dead or live insects, nectar from plants, or honeydew, which are little sugary droplets coming out of aphids. If things were not eaten by other things they would hang around a lot longer. Other ants are herbivores, which means that they only eat plants, such as the leaf-cutter ants. Leaf cutter ants cut leaves from plants and take them to the nest. Inside the nest the leaves are chopped into smaller pieces by small ants, and put into fungus gardens. In these gardens lives a fungus that digests the leaves the ants bring into the nest. The ants then eat small "fruits", called fruiting bodies, that are produced by the fungus. The fungus can only live in ant nests, and nests cannot live without their fungus. This is called mutualism. Other ants are predators, meaning that they only hunt live insects.