Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Science

Leaf-Cutter Ants Have Rocky Crystal Armor, Never Before Seen in Insects (nationalgeographic.com) 17

Leaf-cutter ants are named for their Herculean feats: they chomp foliage and carry unwieldy pieces, like green flags many times their size, long distances to their colonies. There they chew up the leaves to feed underground fungus farms. Along the way, the insects brave all manner of predators -- and regularly engage in wars with other ants. But these insects are even tougher than previously thought. From a report: A new study shows that one Central American leaf-cutter ant species has natural armor that covers its exoskeleton. This shield-like coating is made of calcite with high levels of magnesium, a type found only in one other biological structure: sea urchin teeth, which can grind limestone. Bones and teeth of many animals contain calciferous minerals, and crustaceans, such as crabs and lobsters, have mineralized shells and other body parts. But before this finding, no type of calcite had been found in any adult insect.

In leaf-cutter ants, this coating is made of thousands of tiny, plate-like crystals that harden their exoskeleton. This "armor" helps prevent the insects from losing limbs in battles with other ants and staves off fungal infections, according to a paper published November 24 in the journal Nature Communications. The discovery is especially surprising because the ants are well known. "There are thousands of papers on leaf-cutter ants," says study co-author Cameron Currie, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. "We were really excited to find [this in] one of the most well-studied insects in nature," he says. Though this paper looked only at one species, Acromyrmex echinatior, Currie and colleagues suspect other related ants have the biomineral too.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Leaf-Cutter Ants Have Rocky Crystal Armor, Never Before Seen in Insects

Comments Filter:
  • "they chomp foliage and carry unwieldy pieces, like green flags many times their size, long distances to their colonies"

    • by nagora ( 177841 )

      "they chomp foliage and carry unwieldy pieces, like green flags many times their size, long distances to their colonies"

      I'm not seeing the problem - it's just parenthetical commas, isn't it? Take the middle portion out and it makes a sentence, leave it in and it makes a sentence with a clause describing the pieces of foliage.

    • I can haz an po-Angleski?

      Just because you're functionally illiterate doesn't mean the people who wrote the things you didn't parse were unskilled at English. Perhaps they didn't even try to optimize it to be parsed by idiots? Maybe they don't care about your special needs?

  • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Friday November 27, 2020 @11:52AM (#60770424)

    One thing is for certain: there is no stopping them; the ants will soon be here. And I, for one, welcome our new insect overlords. I'd like to remind them as a trusted IT personality, I can be helpful in rounding up others to toil in their underground sugar caves.

  • by l2718 ( 514756 ) on Friday November 27, 2020 @12:12PM (#60770464)
    Adaptations like this (in ants!) are a central point in Adrian Tschaikovskyâ(TM)s novel Children of Time [wikipedia.org].
  • Ceramic plate body armor.

  • They only developed their ceramic coated armour after hearing about what was happening recently on the net to their relatives over at Food.com. [food.com] And only after their scientists extensively tested the genetic code on themselves against all forms of natural tooth enamel. Only very recently the genetic code to coat ants in ceramics was granted certification by their queens and her consorts as leaf cutter baby safe GMO code.

  • > This shield-like coating is made of calcite with high levels of magnesium

    How woukd the economics of breeding and "refining" these ants compare to regular "hole-in-the-ground" magnesium mining?

Ya'll hear about the geometer who went to the beach to catch some rays and became a tangent ?

Working...