Chandler ant

From Wikimalia

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 4: Line 4:
|description=
|description=
|collection=
|collection=
-
|notes= Symbiotic with the Diax Aphid, these herbivorous insect have 'domesticated' the aphids, which secrete an unpleasant waxy resin. Using the wax to feed the ants' larvae, and to coat their own thorax as a natural repellant to predators, the chandler ant colonies are very territorial, aggressively defending their tree and their aphids from predation.
+
|notes= Symbiotic with the Diax Aphid, these herbivorous insects have 'domesticated' the aphids, which secrete an unpleasant waxy resin. Using the wax to feed the ants' larvae, and to coat their own thorax as a natural repellant to predators, the chandler ant colonies are very territorial, aggressively defending their tree and their aphids from predation.
}}
}}
{{stub}}
{{stub}}

Revision as of 21:48, 4 April 2008

The Bug Collection
[[Image:{{{image}}}|center]]
Chandler Ant
Habitat:Diaxwood trees.
Description:
Notes:Symbiotic with the Diax Aphid, these herbivorous insects have 'domesticated' the aphids, which secrete an unpleasant waxy resin. Using the wax to feed the ants' larvae, and to coat their own thorax as a natural repellant to predators, the chandler ant colonies are very territorial, aggressively defending their tree and their aphids from predation.


This article is a stub. You can help Wikimalia by expanding it.

Personal tools