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| HYMENOPTERA, Formicidae (Stephans 1829) (Vespoidea)
  - (formerly in Formicoidea)          
        Formicidae. --The ants exist
  as many species and they are numerically very abundant.  Polymorphism is pronounced.  The various social orders in the family
  have developed around a caste system. 
  This includes a queen, workers, soldiers, etc.  The workers can appear in different shapes
  and forms as influenced by nutrition and care among individuals of the
  colony.  All of the workers are
  wingless.             The abdomen in this group is rather soft and able to
  take on a great deal of food, which other members of their colony are able to
  solicit.  They obtain it by stroking
  the bearer who then regurgitates the food.             Colony Establishment. -- New males and females in the
  colony develop wings, after which they swarm and mate.  The females fall to the ground and chew
  off their wings, while the males dies. 
  The female then finds a suitable place to construct a cell into which
  she will lay eggs.  While waiting for
  the eggs to hatch, the female does not feed. 
  She derives nourishment by absorbing internal body parts, such as wing
  muscles, etc.             Some species such as the driver and army ants are
  nomadic.  Conspicuous nests in the
  ground may be 2.7 meters or more below the surface.  Ants also may live in oak acorns, dry stems, etc.  Their food includes seeds, dead insects,
  aphid honeydew and household foods. 
  They may even take aphids into their nests for the winter where they
  are attended.             Ant control in houses is possible with poison bait
  traps.  The treatment of concrete
  foundations with insecticides is a more drastic approach.      = = = = =
  = = = = = = =    References:   Please refer to  <biology.ref.htm>, [Additional references may be
  found at:  MELVYL Library]   Bolton, Barry. 1995. 
  A New General Catalogue of the Ants of the World. Harvard
  University Press.    Borror DJ, 
  C.  A. Triplehorn & D. M.
  Delong. 1989. Introduction to the Study of Insects, 6th Edition.
  Saunders College Publishing.   Creighton, W. S.  1950.  Bull. Mus. Comp.
  Zool., Harvard Univ. 104:  1-585.    Hölldobler B & E. O. Wilson. 1990. The Ants. Harvard University
  Press.    Hölldobler B & E. O. Wilson. 1990. The Ants. Harvard University
  Press.    Hölldobler B & E. O. Wilson. 1998. Journey to the Ants: A Story of
  Scientific Exploration. Belknap Press.    Hölldobler B & E. O. Wilson. 2009. The
  Superorganism: The Beauty, Elegance and Strangeness of Insect Societies.
  Norton & Co.   Janzen, D. 
  1967.  Univ. Kansas Sci. Bull. 47: 
  315-558.   Pilgrim, E.
  M., C. D. Von Dohlen & J. P. Pitts. 
  2008. 
  Molecular phylogenetics of Vespoidea indicate paraphyly of the
  superfamily and novel relationships of its component families and
  subfamilies. Zoologica scripta, 37: 539-560.   Smith, M. R. 
  1947. 
  Amer. Midl. Nat. 37:  521-647.   Wheeler, G. C. & J. Wheeler.  1972. 
  Proc. Ent. Soc. Wash. 74: 
  35-45.   Wheeler, W. 
  1926. 
  Ants.  Columbia Univ. Press.  663 p.   Wilson, E. O. & W. L. Brown.  1956. 
  New parasitic ants of the genus Kyidris, with notes on ecology
  and behavior.  Ins. Sociaux
  3:  439-54.   |