When ants eat the fungi, it allows the fungi to grow again. This means the ant will always have a food source and fungi will have everlasting life.
Ants touch each other with their antennae to communicate information such as their identity, social status, and to exchange chemical signals called pheromones. This helps them coordinate their activities within the colony, such as foraging, defending the nest, or marking their foraging trail.
On the African savanna a small bird, kind of like a canry, lives on the back of an elephant, rhino or giraffe. This little bird cleans the creature and rids it of ticks and other pests while in turn the bigger animal, provieds the bird protection from predators.
The four broad types of pathogens are bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites. Each type of pathogen can cause various diseases and illnesses in humans and other organisms.
Fungi and green algae often exist in a symbiotic relationship, particularly in lichens, where fungi provide structure and protection while algae (or cyanobacteria) perform photosynthesis to produce food. While they can survive independently—fungi as decomposers and green algae in various aquatic environments—they thrive together by enhancing each other's survival and nutrient acquisition. Thus, while not strictly dependent, their relationship offers mutual benefits that help them thrive in challenging environments.
Fungi do not use photosynthesis. Also, fungi don't have leaves and roots. Finally, unlike plants, the cell walls of fungi contain chitin.Fungi and plants are in the same domain (Eukarya), but are separate kingdoms. Plants are autotrophs (they make their own food through chemosynthesis or photosynthesis), while fungi are heterotrophs (more specifically they are either parasites or saprobes). Other differences are also present in structure (for example, fungi cell walls are made of chitin while plants' cell walls are made of cellulose), specialization, etc.
ants work together by teaming with each other and helping each other.
Ants use chemical signals to impart information to each other. This can be information is generally about food or predators. When you see them following each other they are following a chemical trail not the ants in front of them.
pheromones
YES!
Ants do not experience emotions like sadness or grief when other ants die. They operate more on instinct and chemical signals to communicate with each other.
It is their mode of communication about movement,procurement of food etc. that ants touch each other while passing in a row.
Ants use chemical signals to tell each other about food and a number of other things like enemies.
Put 10 ants in a row. Now put ten such rows next to each other so that you have a square of ten by ten ants, giving you 100 ants. Now put 20 such squares of ants on top of each other, 20 ants high. This gives you a block of 10X10X20 ants. That would be 2000 ants. The same would be true of dice, or bricks, or basketballs.
Ants communicate danger to each other through the release of chemical signals called pheromones. When an ant detects a threat, it releases these pheromones to alert other ants in the colony, triggering a coordinated response to protect the group.
The ants and bees are bumping into each other in "Ant and Bee and the ABC." They are doing so in search of their hats.
There is no way to measure an ant's IQ. Ants seem to be intelligent creatures because they do communicate with each other.
ants