There are two types of garbage ants; the blue and red garbage ants. The red garbage ants collect garbage, while the blue garbage ants produce garbage.
Many insects eat garbage. Maggots, flies, ants, and roaches are the main insects that one finds eating their garbage.
Ants are most commonly found outdoors in gardens, lawns, and wooded areas, as well as inside homes and buildings seeking food and water sources. They are also commonly found near food storage areas, garbage bins, and areas with moisture.
Ants that eat other ants.
Not all flying ants are carpenter ants. However, all carpenter ants can fly. There are various types of flying ants. Carpenter ants can be distinguished by their larger size and reddish tone to their body.
No, of course not. Bullet ants are the most poisonous ants in the world and the bull ants *not bulldog* are the most dangerous.
Many insects eat garbage. Maggots, flies, ants, and roaches are the main insects that one finds eating their garbage.
Generally speaking, ants will move the bodies of their dead to a sort of "garbage dump" on the outskirts of their colony where waste is also kept. The garbage dump ants (usually the eldest members of the colony) are hard-wired to carry the bodies here to decompose.
Ants can follow a food trail to its source, like a dog food bowl or an inside garbage can. Since ants also have a painful or itchy bite, I'd imagine some people would like them to die. So thus ant repellent is used.
Garbage must be handled properly to prevent the spread of disease, reduce vermin, and minimize odors. Garbage treated through a garbage disposal must be properly vented, macerated and rinsed in order to prevent backup in the sink drains and into the dishwasher (if one is present). Food waste and food containers are tremendous sources of odors and are extremely attractive targets for rats, mice, pigeons, ants, and other disease carriers.
Ants are most commonly found outdoors in gardens, lawns, and wooded areas, as well as inside homes and buildings seeking food and water sources. They are also commonly found near food storage areas, garbage bins, and areas with moisture.
Garbage. You put Garbage in the Garbage.
It depends on the kind of ant. Some kinds of ants are fierce meat eaters; they will actually go out and fight and kill ants in other colonies, generally ants of another species, and carry them back to eat or to feed to their larvae. Some kinds of tiny ants will burrow next to the burrows of larger species of ants. They will rush in to the larger burrows to carry away the eggs and larvae of the larger ants to their nests in the smaller burrows. There the large ants can't get at them. Then they will eat the eggs and larvae that they collected. Some kinds will eat their own colony mates when they die. However, some other kinds of ants mostly eat plant material, seeds and so on. Such ants are not much inclined to eat meat as a rule and if any of their colony mates die, they simply leave the corpses on their garbage dumps.
garbage in, garbage out.. it also a famous underware brand garbage in, garbage out garbage in, garbage out
Yes ants do produce ants to continue the family.
red ants
Elmo's Ants.
Mutualistic. That answer can be correct but it really depends on what you are talking about. For example some kinds of ants some of the time have a mutualistic relationship with scale insects that feed on plants in the family Proteaceae and may kill them. Some other kinds of ants do nothing for the plant, but do eat its nectar, which is a parasitic relationship. Such ants do not have a mutualistic relationship with the plant. Also, the relationship between the ants and the Proteaceae may be mutualistic in more ways than one. A common mutualistic relationship is one we call myrmecochory, in which the ants carry the seeds and thereby help the new plants to grow. What the ants get out of it is food. The plants grow nutritious tissues on the surface of the seeds, commonly at one end of the seed. We call such a lump of ant-feeding tissue an elaiosome.When the ants have eaten the elaiosome they either ignore the seed, or dispose of it on their garbage dumps. This usually is not where birds and other seed eating creatures will find the seeds, and it also might be a place that is very suitable for the seed to grow. For example the garbage might be good fertiliser, or it might poison fungi that might have rotted the seeds, or scare off other insects that might otherwise have eaten the seeds.