Yes, soldier ants can exhibit behavior that suggests they return for their wounded. Some species, particularly in the subfamily Formicinae, display a form of social care, where they will assist injured nestmates by transporting them back to the nest. This behavior helps maintain the colony's strength and cohesion, as injured ants can still contribute to the colony's survival if cared for. However, the extent of this behavior can vary among different ant species.
No, but there are soldier ants.
The soldier was wounded after the war
A wounded soldier could be used to evoke sympathy or rage, to not want the soldier's suffering to be in vain or to extract revenge for his suffering.
A SOLDIER MUST BE WOUNDED OR KILLED PERFORMING HIS OR HER DUTY. A SOLDIER MUST BE WOUNDED OR KILLED PERFORMING HIS OR HER DUTY.
The youngest recorded soldier to be wounded in the US Civil War was a Union drummer boy named William Black. He was 12 when he was wounded by an explosing shell.
The Soldier's Return was created in 2000.
The Return of the Soldier was created in 1918.
Soldier ants are responsible for protecting the colony from threats such as predators and other ant species. They have larger heads and powerful mandibles that they use for defense and to attack intruders. Soldier ants may also participate in foraging and nest maintenance activities within the colony.
He was a wounded Confederate soldier
They are sterile (non reproductive) females. The small group of males in a colony, called drones, are only to mate with the queen orqueens; after two weeks they die.
Melvyn Bragg wrote The Soldier's Return.
The Return of the Soldier has 185 pages.