USF Professor discovers fire ants play dead to survive
Ants who pretend to be dead are four times more likely to survive an attack
Anna Peters, The Oracle (USF)
Issue date: 5/15/08 Section: Health & Science
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Cassill and her class of undergraduate students were studying the aggressive behavior of ants. While videotaping them, they noticed one ant attack and seem to kill another. However, after the attacking ant left, the other got up and walked away.
"I have never seen this behavior before and I don't think anybody else has ever witnessed this behavior in any ant species," Cassill said.
Cassill and the class discovered that younger fire ant workers fake death as a defense strategy against attacking colonies. Ants that pretend to be dead are four times more likely to survive an attack than older workers who choose to fight back.
The discovery was so stunning that two students in the class decided to conduct a directed study on the fighting behavior of ants, and some of the students have co-authored peer reviewed articles with Cassill on the subject for the scientific journal Die Naturwissenschaften.
"This ant playing dead was so interesting that it was worth its own research experiment and paper," Cassill said.
Cassill and the class have posited two explanations as to why the ants fake their deaths. One was to ensure the survival of valuable younger workers to tend to the queen and increase the colony's size. Another was that newly hatched ants, more apt to injuries in battles because of their soft external skeletons, are less aggressive.
Cassill, a biologist specializing in evolutionary biology and the evolution of social behavior, said ants and human beings are similar in more ways than one.
"Ants are one of the few social species that are anatomically very different from humans but a lot of their social behavior parallels human behaviors," Cassill said. "So what I bring to the research on social behavior is kind of a psychological point of view. I'm interested in what the individual does and how they interact with others."
Each student also focused individual research on other types of ant behavior, including napping patterns, decision-making, hunger and aggression.
Some of these studies have been published in other scientific journals, including the Journal of Insect Behavior and Insectes Sociaux.


Viewing Comments 1 - 3 of 3
Ants eat
posted 6/24/08 @ 12:58 AM EST
"Ants are one of the few social species that are anatomically very different from humans but a lot of their social behavior parallels human behaviors," Cassill said. (Continued…)
joyce michele
posted 6/24/08 @ 2:51 AM EST
gee... you think?!
i noted this behavior countless times on kitchen counters!!!!(not necessarily mine, mind you....)
David
posted 6/25/08 @ 2:47 PM EST
yeah this is really going to solve the high costs of energy, food, and the economy..
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